When surviving doctors rushed to save lives


Scene of tragedy: Rescue officials are seen near the wreckage of Air India Flight 171 after it crashed in a residential area near the airport in Ahmedabad.

Navin Chaudhary had just begun eating his meal when a loud bang startled him. He turned back to see a massive fire taking over the dining area where he and other trai­nee doctors had assembled for lunch. With the blaze approaching him, Chaudhary rushed towards a window and jumped.

From the ground, looking upwards, the sight of the Air India plane’s tail cone hanging from the burning building propelled Chau­dhary and fellow medical students into action.

“There was fire and many were injured,” he said.

Chaudhary said he felt lucky to survive, but knew he had a task at hand. He rushed to the hospital’s intensive care unit, where the injured, most of whom had burns, were wheeled in on stretchers.

“I felt that as a doctor, I could save someone’s life,” he said. “I was safe. So I thought, whatever I can do, I should.”

At least 270 died when the Air India flight crashed into the campus of a medical college in Ahme­dabad shortly after take-off on Thursday.

Only one passenger among the 242 aboard survived. At least 29 others on the ground, including five medical students inside the hostel, were also killed.

Chaudhary speaking to reporters. — AFP/APChaudhary speaking to reporters. — AFP/AP

Many believe that the death toll would have been higher if it had not been for the intervention of the trainee doctors and students who emerged from the smoulde­ring hostel and rushed to save their colleagues.

Akshay Zala, a senior medical student, said the crash felt “like an earthquake”.

“I could hardly see anything as thick plumes of smoke and dust engulfed everything. I was barely able to breathe,” he said.

Zala rushed to safety, running through dust and smoke. He clean­ed and bandaged a wound on his left leg, then joined others at the medical college’s trauma centre to treat the injured.

On Monday, the crash site teemed with excavators and workers clearing the debris.

Officials inspected the building in search of clues that could enable the investigators to figure out what led to the tragedy.

Barely a kilometre away, trainee doctors who survived one of India’s worst aviation disasters were still working to identify the victims through DNA testing.

Indian authorities have so far handed over the remains of 47 victims.

The bodies of 92 others have also been identified through DNA matching and will be transferred to relatives soon.

College dean Minakshi Parikh said that many of the doctors who pulled their colleagues out of the debris, later that day went back to their duties to save as many lives as they could.

“They did that and that spirit has continued till this moment,” Parikh said.

Images of the hostel’s dining area shortly after the crash show­ed parts of the aircraft and pieces of luggage strewn on the floor. Dining plates still containing food lay on the few dusty tables that were left intact by the impact.

“So that is human nature, isn’t it? When our own people are injured, our first response is to help them,” Parikh said.

“So the doctors who managed to escape, the first thing that they did was go back in and dig out their collea­gues who were trap­ped inside.

“They might not even have survived because the rescue teams take time coming,” she added. — AP

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