The investigation into last week’s Air India disaster, which claimed 158 lives, has descended into a bitter international dispute. UK aviation experts, citing concerns over political interference and opaque data sharing, are now calling for an independent inquiry under United Nations auspices.
The crash, involving a Boeing 787 Dreamliner on approach to Kozhikode, has been mired in controversy from the outset. India’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has been leading the probe, but UK specialists argue that the agency lacks the necessary transparency and technical independence.
Dr. Helena Vance, Science & Climate Correspondent, notes that the parallels with climate science are stark. “We see the same pattern: when data is sequestered, when stakeholders are excluded, trust evaporates. The physics of a crash, like the physics of our atmosphere, does not care about national pride.”
At the heart of the row is access to the flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder. UK experts, including former air accident investigators from the Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB), claim that Indian authorities have been slow to release raw data. They allege that key parameters were initially redacted, including engine thrust readings and control surface angles.
“Without full, unfiltered data, any conclusion is suspect,” said Professor James Whitfield, a veteran crash analyst. “We are not calling for a takeover. We are calling for an international panel to oversee the analysis. This is standard practice for complex accidents involving multiple nations.”
The Indian Ministry of Civil Aviation has rejected these claims, insisting that the DGCA is acting in accordance with International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) protocols. In a statement, they accused UK experts of “grandstanding” and “undermining India’s sovereignty.”
But the stakes are high. The Dreamliner, a marvel of modern engineering, relies on sophisticated composite materials and fly-by-wire systems. Any mechanical or software flaw could have implications for the global fleet. Already, regulators in Europe and the United States have issued advisories, though no grounding has been ordered.
Dr. Vance emphasises the broader context: “This is not just about one crash. It is about how we handle risk in a hyper-connected world. We saw during the Boeing 737 MAX crisis how bureaucratic capture can delay corrections. The aviation industry, like the energy sector, resists transformative change until catastrophe forces its hand.”
For the families of the victims, the dispute is a torturous delay. Over 50 bodies remain unidentified, and compensation payments are frozen pending the inquiry’s outcome. “We just want the truth,” said Priya Menon, whose husband was a passenger. “But truth seems to be a political football.”
As the row intensifies, the British government has offered to mediate, though New Delhi has so far declined. Meanwhile, the black box recorders have been sent to France’s Bureau of Enquiry and Analysis for counter-analysis, a move that has placated some critics but not the UK group.
The fundamental question remains: can any nation, acting alone, fully investigate a disaster of this magnitude? With manufacturing supply chains spanning continents and regulatory frameworks fragmented, the answer may be no. Dr. Vance concludes: “We need a global system for such probes, one insulated from commercial and political pressures. The alternative is a patchwork of partial truths, and that is a crash waiting to happen.”
The report has been filed from London with contributions from New Delhi.








