Kozhikode plane crash: Air India says 74 injured passengers discharged from hospitals
Air India Express, a wholly owned subsidiary of national carrier Air India, has only B737 aircraft in its fleet.
Air India Express, a wholly owned subsidiary of national carrier Air India, has only B737 aircraft in its fleet.
Air India Express, a wholly owned subsidiary of national carrier Air India, has only B737 aircraft in its fleet.
New Delhi: Air India Express on Tuesday said 74 passengers injured in the plane crash in Kozhikode have been discharged from hospital after "obtaining complete fitness".
Civil Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri had said on Saturday that 149 people have been admitted to hospitals, 23 have been discharged, while three are critically injured in the B737 plane crash.
The Air India Express flight from Dubai with 190 people, including a six-member crew, overshot the tabletop runway during landing at the Kozhikode airport in heavy rain on Friday night, fell into a valley 35 feet below and broke into two, killing 18 people, including the pilots.
The injured passengers of IX-1344 flight are being treated at various hospitals of Kozhikode, the airline said in a statement.
"As on date, 74 injured passengers have been discharged from various hospitals after obtaining their complete fitness," it added.
Air India Express, a wholly owned subsidiary of national carrier Air India, has only B737 aircraft in its fleet.
The airline said on Sunday that the mortal remains of 16 passengers killed in the plane crash have been handed over to their families, and added that authorities were investigating the accident.