In the wake of the devastating Air India crash, survivors have been left in the dark, their pleas for answers met with silence. Families wait, desperate for news of loved ones, while officials stall. This tragedy, unfolding far from UK shores, has once again highlighted the glaring divide in aviation safety protocols worldwide.
But here, in Britain, we have a different story. Our standards are the gold standard, the envy of the globe. After the Manchester air disaster of 1985, we rewrote the rulebook.
We demanded better. We got it. Now, as survivors of the Air India crash are ignored, it's time to ask: why should global aviation play by lesser rules?
The UK's Civil Aviation Authority sets a high bar, from pilot training to aircraft maintenance. We don't cut corners. We don't let corporate interests trump passenger safety.
The Air India crash survivors deserve the same. They deserve answers. They deserve the safety net that UK passengers take for granted.
It's not about blaming; it's about learning. It's about demanding that every nation, every airline, meets our standard. Because in the skies, there is no room for second best.
And until survivors get the attention they need, until global safety matches our own, we must keep pushing. The human cost is too high.








