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‘Raised Flight Safety Concerns In 2020’: YouTuber ‘Flying Beast’ Gaurav Taneja After Ahmedabad Plane Crash

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Air India Ahmedabad Plane Crash: A day after the deadly Ahmedabad plane crash, YouTuber Gaurav Taneja- also popular as Flying Beast- claimed that he had raised ‘serious flight safety concerns’ against Air Asia, however, the airline allegedly did not fix the issue.

YouTuber Gaurav Taneja’s X post goes viral. Image Source: Gaurav Taneja/ X
Air India Ahmedabad Plane Crash: The deadly Air India Ahmedabad plane crash that resulted in massive casualties, along with significant structural damage and heartbreaking stories- ended up raising multiple questions on the very way an airline maintains its safety inspections and other vital issues. Amid all kinds of questions and reactions by netizens on the plane crash, Youtuber Gaurav Taneja also joined in, and recalled the time when he did something similar in 2020. Taneja, also popular as Flying Beast, took to his social media handle a day after the crash and claimed that he had ‘raised serious flight safety concerns against Air Asia’ in 2020. However, as per the YouTuber’s post, the airline did not fix the issue, and instead ‘fired the whistleblower’.
For context, Air India Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner crashed in Ahmedabad’s Meghaninagar area on June 12, Thursday- soon after the take off. The Air India Flight AI171 crashed into the hostel mess of BJ Medical College. The flight reportedly took off at 1:39 PM from Runway number 23 at the Ahmedabad airport, with 242 passengers and crew onboard. As per reports, former Gujarat Chief Minister Vijay Rupani was also onboard the crashed flight.
A 'May Day' distress call was issued to the Ahmedabad air traffic controller- soon after the takeoff, according to a statement by aviation regulator DGCA. However, the plane received no response. The number of casualties has not been confirmed yet, whereas intensive rescue, evacuation, and firefighting operations were launched soon after the accident. Reportedly, the plane had descended rapidly- dropping 475 feet per minute from an altitude of 625 feet.
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