“I have no words to express to console any of the families of those who died. I deeply regret that this accident happened in a Tata-run airline. And I feel very sorry.” Air India and Tata Sons Chairman N Chandrasekaran apologised during an interview with Times Now.
In his first time speaking since the tragic Air India AI-171 crash in Ahmedabad on June 12, that claimed over 270 lives, a remorseful Chandrasekaran added, “All we can do is to be with the families at this time, grieve with them, and we will do everything to support them at this hour and beyond.”
Here are key takeaways from N Chandrasekaran's interview
- On what will be done for affected families: While admitting that it would be difficult to console the families, Chandrasekaran said there are structures they want to put in place. “We wish to create an AI 171 trust which will be available to them to look after. But it is not just about financial needs, but other needs too. We have to think through and create the trust and other functioning infrastructure so that we can be with these families,” he added.
- On criticism over allegedly not attending funerals of the 12 crew members who died: Chandrasekaran responded saying, “That is not true. We discussed it at length on the day before and who should go for the rights for Captain Sabharwal. The chief operating officer of Air India was there, the CHR was there and few more people were there at different levels. And we as a group will do multiple things. It is not about just being visible in one location.”
“There will be a senior person who will be there in all the locations whether it is our crew member or non-crew member. That is why we have created this whole organisation. Some will be in Mumbai, some will be in Gujarat, some will be in other parts of India. But I don't want to say it for any publicity but we will definitely visit all the families. All the top people will visit all the families,” he added.
- On Boeing whistleblowers: He said that the investigative agency would look into the matter, stating: “These are things that are being dealt with by investigative agencies in the US, but overall 787s have been flying for a very long time...we already had 27 787s by the time we bought Air India. And we have not had any red flags in our checks.”
“I did connect with both Boeing and GE at the highest levels. Parallel to the DGCA checks that we have gone through, I have asked them to check and tell us if there have been issues with any of the aircraft or engines,” he added.
- On speculation of human error, aircraft maintenance: Chandrasekaran noted that the AI-171 has a clean history. “There are speculations about human error, speculations about airlines, speculations about engines, maintenance, all kinds. There are a lot of speculations and lot of theories. But the fact that I know so far is this particular aircraft, this specifical tail, AI-171 has a clean history,” he said.
“As for the engines, the right engine was a new engine put in March 2025. The left engine was last serviced in 2023 and due for its next maintenance check in December 2025. Both engine histories are clean,” he added.
- On Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel's questions about Singapore Airlines ‘silence’: The Air India Chair said that the airline has been a “great partner” and helped incorporate “best-in-class benchmarks” for Vistara.
“They have reached out even at this time, their CEO is in constant touch with me. Whether it is customer experience or any other process, they are always available. They have been offering all the help they can,” Chandrasekaran added.