The Asian Age

Capt Sathe survived crash in 1990s, but returned to flying

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Mumbai, Aug. 8: Captain Deepak Sathe, pilot of the Air India Express flight who died along with 17 others after the plane crashed at Kerala’s Kozhikode airport, had survived an air crash in the early 1990s when he was in the Air Force and was hospitalis­ed for six months, his cousin said.

Sathe had suffered multiple injuries on his skull in that incident, but due to his strong will power and passion he cleared the test and started flying again, he said.

The Air India Express flight from Dubai with 190 on board overshot the tabletop runway in Kozhikode airport in Kerala on Friday night while landing in heavy rains and fell into a valley 35 feet below and broke into two portions.

Captain Sathe, 58, who was the pilot-in-command and his co-pilot Akhilesh Kumar were among those who died in the incident.

Sathe was a former Wing Commander of the Indian Air Force (IAF) and had served at the force’s flight testing establishm­ent.

His cousin, Nilesh Sathe, who is advisor finance at the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI), said in a Facebook post, “It’s hard to believe that Deepak Sathe, my friend more than my cousin, is no more. He was pilot of Air India Express carrying passengers from Dubai in ‘Vande Bharat Mission’, which skidded off the runway at Kozhikode Internatio­nal Airport yesterday night.”

“Deepak was an experience­d aerial operator with 36 years of flying experience. A passout of NDA, topper in the 58th course and an awardee of ‘Sword of Honour’, Deepak served Indian Air Force for 21 years before joining as a Commercial Pilot with Air India in 2005. He called me just a week before and was jovial, as always.”

“When I asked him about the ‘Vande Bharat’ Mission, he was proud of bringing back our countrymen from Arab countries.

I asked him, ‘Deepak, do you carry empty Aircraft since those countries are not allowing entry of passengers?’ He had replied, ‘Oh, No. We carry fruits, vegetables, medicines etc to these countries and never the aircraft flies to these countries empty.’ That was my last conversati­on with him.

“He survived in air crash in early nineties when he was in the Air Force. He was hospitalis­ed for 6 months for multiple skull injuries and nobody thought that he would fly again. But his strong will power and love for flying made him clear the test again. It was a miracle,” Sathe said.

According to him, Captain Sathe is survived by his wife and two sons, both passouts of IIT Bombay. — PTI

 ?? — PTI ?? Maharashtr­a home minister Anil Deshmukh meets the parents of late Captain Deepak Sathe who died in the plane crash, in Nagpur on Saturday.
— PTI Maharashtr­a home minister Anil Deshmukh meets the parents of late Captain Deepak Sathe who died in the plane crash, in Nagpur on Saturday.

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