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Mother of British Air India plane crash victim shares agony over body mix up

The mother of Air India Crash’s sacrifice talked about the moment the “heartbreaking” when she was the wrong body to bury it in a background plan.

Fiongal Greenlaw-Meek, 39-year-old, fell into London Gatwick, after celebrating his wedding anniversary in India, his 45-year-old husband Jamie and Ahmedabad were on the plane. Only one passenger survived when Air India Flight lost 171 power and fell into a building by killing 260 people.

Mr. Greenlaw-Meek’s mother Amanda Donaghey, Sunday Times Sending false ruins was “heartbreaking”. “We don’t know what the poor person is in that coffin. This is a terrible thing.”

“I always feel that I stand on the edge of a black hole, ‘Is it eliminated?’ ‘He said.

Fiongal (left) and Jamie Greenlaw-Meek (right) released a video that left India shortly ago

Fiongal (left) and Jamie Greenlaw-Meek (right) released a video that left India shortly ago (Instagram)

Families, including Mrs. Donaghey, were asked to supply DNA samples to help identify the remains of their loved ones, because the nature of the accident reached 1,500C when most of the victims swallowed the area where most of the victims were burned beyond recognition.

He went directly to the hospital, who hadn’t slept for days and tested Fiongal and Jamie in the hope that he could bring home as soon as possible.

It was said that the blood test would be analyzed to follow Fiongal, which could last for 72 hours. After a three -day search, just as he lost hope, Mrs. Donaghey was told that she had a “match for her son, which could bring her remnants to England.

He returned to London Gatwick with the assurance that his son was in the coffin. However, when the family was planning the funerals, the police contacted a British Forensic Forensic Medicoist to say that the remnants of Fiongal’s coffin were not him.

Only one person survived from the plane crash that killed 260 people

Only one person survived from the plane crash that killed 260 people (Getty Images)

Family liaison officers met with Fiongal’s father, sister and brother, Donaghey on July 4, and despite the DNA tests, they said they didn’t have Fiongal.

Since then, the family has tried to understand where the Foreign Ministry and Sons were on the phone every day. As a result, they could not leave Fiongal to rest with her husband.

“We want to be able to make the necessary rituals to continue as a family for Fiongal. And that’s missing. “And now we want the British government to do everything in order to learn Fiongal and bring it home.”

James Healy-Pratt, a lawyer representing a few British families trying to bring back their loved ones, said the remains of at least 12 British victims were sent back.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer is expected to increase concerns about mistakes during a meeting with Indian counterpart Narendra Modi during his state visit to England this week.

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