A year has passed since the Air India tragedy, yet the families of the victims and the British public are still waiting for closure. Six critical questions remain unanswered by Indian authorities, leading UK investigators to renew their calls for transparency. The crash, which claimed 158 lives, has become a symbol of bureaucratic inertia and cross-border investigative failures.
For those left behind, each unanswered query is a fresh wound. As one relative told me, 'We need to know what happened in those final minutes. Not for revenge, but for peace of mind.
' The human cost extends beyond the accident itself. The lack of answers erodes trust in aviation safety protocols and international cooperation. Meanwhile, the cultural shift towards demanding accountability from institutions is palpable.
People no longer accept 'we are investigating' as a sufficient response. They want action. They want answers.
And they want them now.








