The Accident Investigation Commission (AIC) of Nepal terms the Kathmandu Post news report on US-Bangla airlines plane crash ‘‘unethical and fraudulent’’.
The report run by a Nepalese newspaper over the investigation findings on the US-Bangla plane crash led by their government is 'false' and 'baseless', says Captain Salahuddin M Rahmatullah, head of Aircraft Accident Investigation Group of Civil Aviation Authority of Bangladesh (CAAB).
US-Bangla plane crash survivor Kabir Hossain whose right leg was amputated on March 26 at a hospital in Singapore has now contracted infection on his left leg.
US-Bangla Airlines crash survivor Shaheen Bepari dies at Dhaka Medical College Hospital.
US-Bangla plane crash survivor Kabir Hossain, who is undergoing treatment at the burn unit of Dhaka Medical College Hospital, might be taken to Singapore for better treatment, doctors say.
The funeral of last three Bangladeshi victims of the US-Bangla aircraft crash was held yesterday.
The identities of the three remaining Bangladeshi victims of the US-Bangla aircraft crash were confirmed yesterday.
Dreams lost: memories burn
Ever since the news of Pilot Abid Sultan's death in the US-Bangla plane crash came, all Tamjid, his only son, tried to do was make sure his mother was in a stable condition.
A week after US-Bangla Airlines pilot Captain Abid Sultan lost his life in the plane crash at Nepal airport, his wife suffered a stroke yesterday morning.
Bodies of the Bangladeshis identified following the US-Bangla airplane crash in Nepal’s Tribhuvan International Airport (TIA) will be brought in the country on Tuesday.
The landing of US-Bangla Airlines plane that crashed and killed 51 people, including 28 Bangladeshis, was incorrect, Tribhuvan International Airport (TIA) claims.
Even a single death due to accident is too many. So the statistics that there have been only two major aviation disasters in Bangladesh in the last 33 years are only of trivial importance. A tragedy in which 51 people died puts countries into a collective bereavement.
Almun Nahar Annie, one of the survivors, had been refusing to go back to Bangladesh. Last night though, she finally changed her mind. Annie lost her husband FH Priok and their only child Tamarra in the BS211 crash. What does she have to go back to?
The first Bangladeshi survivor of the US-Bangla disaster in Kathmandu returned home yesterday. Straight from the airport, Shahreen Ahmed, who was undergoing treatment at the Kathmandu Medical College Hospital since Monday's crash, was taken to Dhaka Medical College Hospital's burn unit.