This story is from May 24, 2016

Air ambulance with 7 on board crash-lands in Delhi

An air ambulance with 7 people on board crashed near Najafgarh in Delhi on Tuesday. The air ambulance had taken off from Patna and was enroute to Delhi when it crashed. There is no report of casualties yet.
Air ambulance crash lands in Delhi's Najafgarh
(TOI photo by Raj Shekhar)
Key Highlights
  • Air ambulance with 7 people on board crash landed in a field in Najafgarh village in west Delhi
  • The air ambulance had taken off from Patna and was enroute to Delhi when it crash landed.
NEW DELHI/GURGAON: An air ambulance with seven people on board crash-landed in a field in Najafgarh area of southwest Delhi on Tuesday. Fortunately, no one sustained any major injury.
The air ambulance had taken off from Patna and was en route to Delhi when it crash-landed.
The six-seater Beech King Air C-90A aircraft crash landed at around 2.40pm on a field in Kair village in Najafgarh about 10km from the Indira Gandhi International Airport, police officials said.
The 27-year-old plane belonging to Chandigarh-based private operator Alchemist Airways had to force land after both its engines failed, airport officials said.
Aviation regulator DGCA has already started an inquiry into the incident.
A 61-year-old cardiac patient Virender Rai, who was being flown to Delhi, has been rushed to the Medanta hospital in Gurgaon immediately after the incident. The other passengers were taken to a nearby government hospital for medical examination.
According to hospital sources, the patient's condition is stated to be critical.
The 1989-make aircraft, carrying registration number VT EQO, was in touch with to Air Traffic Control as it was in the final approach to landing.

Air ambulance pic1

Air ambulance pic2
(TOI photos by Raj Shekhar)
The six other on board included Rupesh (doctor), Jung Bahadur (aircraft technician), Juhi and Bhagwan Rai (both relatives of the patient), Amit Kumar (pilot) and Rohit (co-pilot).
"I pray for the early recovery of the injured. The causes of the accident shall be looked into," tweeted civil aviation minister Ashok Gajapathi Raju.
Minister of state for civil aviation Mahesh Sharma said DGCA officials have been sent to the site of the incident to conduct a probe.
"We received an emergency call from the pilot. Both the engines of the aircraft had reportedly failed. They made the landing safe. The DGCA is looking into the incident," Sharma told reporters.
As many as 14 fire tenders were rushed to the spot immediately after the aircraft crash-landed.
(With inputs from agencies)
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