The ghosts of the Air India disaster still haunt Whitehall. A decade on, British aviation investigators are not just remembering the 329 dead. They are naming the culprits.
Complacency. Gaps in intelligence sharing. A system that failed to connect the dots.
The report lands in Westminster like a warning shot. One senior source called it 'a damning indictment of the culture at the time.' The key lesson?
That security loopholes are not just technical failures. They are political failures. And the price is measured in lives.
Backbenchers are already sharpening their questions. The transport select committee will demand answers. The question now is whether the current government has learned.
Or whether history is simply repeating itself. The families are watching. So are the voters.








