Independent thought not tied to any post, but developing from only published MSM and from my personal family experience, pilots enjoy their jobs. It takes a lot to get there in the first place and I have never known one who said, "I'll take early retirement." Au contraire, they are usually in the camp of pushing for raising the mandatory retirement age...60, then 65, now pushing for 67.
Investigators are going through every part of the Captain and First Officer, personal/private/professional/emotional stressors/ medical & mental. (Everything from what they ate, drank and if they used their cell phones during periods of mandatory rest time.)
According to (now numerous articles) Captain S's time was "short."
" 'Just one or two flights left, then I am going to be just with Papa.'"
If Captain had to catch a plane from Mumbai to Ahmedabad (flight
ONE) and then Ahmedabad to London (flight
TWO).
The incredibly sad pieces are beginning to fit...and even the airline is now stating he was on his way out of his job. My mind is imagining a man who is seeing "the end" of too much to handle...
"I hope I die first because I can't imagine a life without you." ???
Man-oh-man...this is really messed up...a lot of social & cultural taboos, secrets, resentment...just not wanting to go on?
Attempted suicide is a crime in India, but actually accomplishing the act is not! Go figure.
Decriminalising attempted suicide in India: the new penal code
BNS removes Section 309 IPC, ending criminal penalties for attempted suicide in India. A crucial step toward compassionate mental health care.This is a transformational approach and gives support to victims of death by suicide and their families.
cmhlp.org
I would think of a different issue.
The captain passed his Class I medical exam on September 5, 2024. The FO, in February of 2025.
I don’t know the requirements but shouldn’t they be annual? It seems logical.
If so, two flights might be related to the time left before the next exam, and could be two, three or “a couple more”.
Supposedly it is something that they questioned last time, “OK, it may be nothing but if you have such-and-such symptoms, just come back”. Or even, “your hemoglobin is on the lower end, take vitamin B12 and some iron and we’ll check it next year”.
Seasoned pilots cost a lot, trained pilots cost a lot, pilot trainers cost a lot for the industry and I think certificates can be extended for a year because Class I doesn’t mean “excellent”, it means “fit for flying”, and he was fit, and flew well.
But he knows the symptoms. He watches them. And he does not want his ailing dad to become the caregiver?
(Too many things, blood in urine or stool, or even hands tremor could be an indication. I am asking what was the illness his mom died of).
Then “your son died in an accident” would be the best explanation.
Alternatively, it could be the young FO. He seemed to be more worldly, trained in the US, was a bodybuilder, typically a different set of issues, one has to look at all they use for muscle mass, but it is not impossible either.
I would like to know if the captain asked the FO to change seats before the takeoff.
Whoever did it… it would seem to me that they both sincerely tried to avoid hitting the external buildings on the ground, because the maneuvers seemed to limit the amount of ground damages. (Which would be logically explainable, as this was not the part of the “airport picture” and perhaps not even taken into initial account if someone planned suicide).
Here is a list of potential suicides by pilot by 2015. Feel free to add the ones since then.
Six cases identified by French investigators where airline pilots appear to have deliberately crashed, often resulting in many fatalities.
www.bbc.com
Additional question I am asking is if the pilots traveled anywhere for vacations and if so, where did they go?