They say a plane crash is a chain of errors, a series of unfortunate events that align perfectly to produce tragedy. But sometimes, the weakest link is a person. British investigators have finalised their probe into the Air India crash that claimed 158 lives, and their findings point squarely at the cockpit. The report flags 'significant gaps' in pilot training, a euphemism that suggests something more troubling: a culture where procedure is often bypassed, where checklists are abandoned in the heat of the moment.
For those of us on the ground, this is another reminder that the miracle of flight depends on fallible humans. The investigators found that the pilots, both experienced, failed to follow standard operating procedures during the landing approach. They were distracted, perhaps fatigued. But the deeper issue is systemic. Air India, like many carriers, has been criticised for training that emphasises rote learning over decision-making under stress. In a crisis, pilots need more than muscle memory; they need the mental agility to override instinct.
The report lands at a time when the aviation industry is grappling with a pilot shortage. Airlines are fast-tracking cadets through training programmes, cutting corners in the process. In India, where demand for air travel is soaring, the pressure is even greater. The human cost of this crash is not just the lives lost, but the erosion of trust. Every time I board a plane, I look at the crew and wonder: were they trained to handle the unthinkable, or just to pass a test?
This is not about blaming a single airline. It is about a global culture of cost-cutting that has crept into the clouds. The investigators recommend mandatory simulator training for all pilots on emergency procedures, and a review of crew resource management. Good ideas on paper. But the real test will be whether airlines implement them without waiting for the next tragedy.
As I write this, the families of the victims wait for closure. They will not get it from a report. They will only get it when they know that their loved ones' deaths have changed something. That flying is safer because of what happened. That is the only legacy worth having.








