India’s Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) says its investigation into an Air India crash is in the final stages, with key work largely completed but some analytical tasks still pending before any conclusions are finalised. According to a court-related filing reported by Mint, the AAIB prepares a cockpit voice recorder (CVR) transcript and conducts a psychological autopsy as part of its review. The Kathmandu Post similarly reports that the AAIB has completed major investigative components, including the CVR-related work and psychological assessments, while noting that additional items are still to be addressed. These remaining steps include analysis of engine data and organisational assessments, which are described as unfinished and may need to be completed before the investigation’s findings can be issued. Overall, the sources indicate the AAIB is synthesising operational, human factors, and technical information, using the CVR record and psychology-focused review to examine what may have contributed to the accident. The probe’s status is characterised as near completion, with final conclusions dependent on the remaining technical and organisational evaluations.
Air India crash probe nears conclusion as cockpit transcript and psychological autopsy are reviewed
India’s Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) says its investigation into an Air India crash is in the final stages, with key work largely completed but some analytical tasks still pending bef...
- India’s Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) says the Air India crash investigation is nearing completion.
- The AAIB prepares a cockpit voice recorder (CVR) transcript as part of the investigation.
- The AAIB conducts a psychological autopsy or psychological review as part of the assessment.
- Some analysis is still pending, including engine data analysis.
- Organisational assessments are also still pending before final conclusions are finalised.
India’s Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau says key investigative work has been completed, but engine data analysis and organisational assessments are still pending before conclusions are finalised.
A court filing showed that India's Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) reportedly prepared a cockpit voice recorder transcript and conducted a psychological autopsy.
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