A British man has walked away from the wreckage of the Air India crash that killed 241 people in an extraordinary tale of survival.
Vishwashkumar Ramesh was in seat 11A on the London-bound Boeing 787 flight when it crashed shortly after take off in Ahmedabad, western India.
Mr Ramesh’s brother, Nayan Kumar Ramesh, told BBC News Vishwashkumar “has no idea how he survived” and escaped the plane as the only survivor.
Air India said all other passengers and crew were killed – including 169 Indian nationals and 52 Britons.
Nayan told the BBC “it feels great seeing him [Vishwashkumar] doing well” but he was worried about his other brother Ajay, who was also onboard.
“We were all in shock as soon as we heard what happened, just utter shock. Speechless,” he said.
“He [Vishwashkumar] himself has no idea how he survived, how he got out the plane.
“When he called us he was just more worried about my other brother, like ‘Find Ajay, find Ajay.’ That’s all he cares about at the moment.”
A relative called Jay told the PA news agency: “He’s got some injuries on his face. He was painted in blood. He’s doing well I think. It’s a big shock.”
Video shared on social media showed Mr Ramesh walking towards an ambulance, with smoke billowing in the background.
He was later seen in a hospital bed meeting Indian interior minister Amit Shah.
Dr Dhaval Gameti, who treated Mr Ramesh, said: “He was disorientated, with multiple injuries all over his body. But he seems to be out of danger.”
Indian media said he shared his boarding pass, which showed his name and seat number.
The businessman, who was born in India and has lived in the UK since 2003, has a wife and four-year-old son.
The plane crashed into accommodation used by trainee doctors less than a minute after take-off in Ahmedabad in the state of Gujarat. It is not clear how many people on the ground died and the cause of the crash is still unknown.
Three Britons thought to have died on the flight have been named by Gloucester Muslim Society as Akeel Nanabawa, his wife Hannaa Vorajee and their daughter Sara.
“They touched lots of people and they will be missed by lots of people,” imam Abdullah Samad.
Couple Fiongal and Jamie Greenlaw-Meek, who run a spiritual wellness centre in London, are also thought to have been on the flight. They laughed and joked in an Instagram video as they told of their “10-hour flight back to England”.
Their firm the Wellness Foundry has been approached for comment.
Also on the plane were Javed and his wife Mariam Syed, from West London, alongside their two young children.
Ammaarah Taju, the granddaughter of a couple from Blackburn who were onboard the flight, said she was in shock and disbelief.
Adam Taju, 72, and his wife Hasina, 70, were flying back from Ahmedabad’s International Airport with their 51-year-old son-in-law, Altafhusen Patel who lives in London with his wife.
-BBC