A year after the crash of Air India Flight 182, the families of the 329 victims gather on the anniversary to demand answers. The investigation, led by the Indian government, remains mired in complexity. Six key questions persist, each a thread in a tangled web of evidence and contradictions.
First, the cause of the explosion. The cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder, recovered from the depths of the Atlantic, have been analysed. But the exact chain of events leading to the mid-air breakup remains unclear. Was it a bomb, a structural failure, or something else?
Second, the nature and origin of the explosive device. Preliminary reports suggested a bomb in a suitcase, but confirmation has been elusive. If it was a bomb, how was it smuggled aboard? The airport security protocols at the time are under scrutiny.
Third, the role of the baggage reconciliation system. The airline's system failed to identify that a bag without a passenger was on board. This lapse is central to the investigation. Why did the system fail, and who was responsible?
Fourth, the intelligence and security failures. There were warnings of a potential terrorist attack on Air India flights. Why were these not acted upon? The investigation has explored the possibility of insider involvement or negligence.
Fifth, the response of air traffic control and emergency services. The aircraft made no distress call before disappearing from radar. The timeline of events from the last known contact to the discovery of debris is critical. Delays in search and rescue operations have been criticised.
Sixth, the broader geopolitical and legal implications. The crash occurred near Ireland, but the investigation involves India, Canada, and the UK. Jurisdictional issues have complicated the inquiry. The families want accountability, but the legal process has been slow.
These questions are not academic. They represent a gap in the official narrative that has left families without closure. A year on, the investigation's report is incomplete. The public wait for answers, but the physical laws of evidence, like entropy, tend towards disorder. Each day complicates the search for truth.
The crash of Flight 182 is a stark reminder of the fragility of engineered systems. Aircraft are marvels of physics, but they are only as safe as the human protocols that surround them. The families' demands are reasonable. In the absence of concrete answers, they are left with the cold comfort of data: a flight path that ended in the ocean, a load of passengers who never arrived.
The investigation continues, but the clock is ticking. For the families, every unanswered question is a wound that does not heal. They have gathered to remember, but also to demand that the six questions be answered. The truth, like gravity, is a constant force. It will eventually pull the facts to light.








