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Worst Mid-Air Crash in Aviation History

Mid-Air Crash History

By Imran Ali ShahPublished about 8 hours ago 3 min read

It was evening over Delhi, and two airplanes carrying a total of 349 people were moving toward each other in the sky. One aircraft was preparing to land at Indira Gandhi International Airport, while the other had just taken off from the same airport.

Both pilots were receiving instructions from the same air traffic controller, and there was supposed to be a 1,000-foot altitude gap between them. But for reasons that were not yet clear, the two planes that were meant to pass safely instead collided in mid-air.

How did such a terrible accident happen?

The Worst Mid-Air Collision in History

This tragic incident is known today as the 1996 Charkhi Dadri mid-air collision, one of the deadliest aviation accidents ever.

Every minute, around 15,000 to 25,000 airplanes are flying somewhere in the world. According to flight radar data, more than 100,000 flights land every day worldwide.

So why don’t airplanes collide more often?

The answer is air traffic control systems and airways in the sky. Just like highways on the ground, aircraft follow imaginary routes called airways. Air traffic controllers guide planes along these routes and keep them separated by different flight levels (altitudes).

For example:

Eastbound flights may fly at 35,000, 37,000, or 39,000 feet

Westbound flights may fly at 34,000, 36,000, or 38,000 feet

This system allows thousands of aircraft to pass safely every day.

But on 12 November 1996, something went terribly wrong over India.

The Two Flights

One aircraft was Kazakhstan Airlines Flight 1907, an Ilyushin Il‑76 cargo plane traveling from Shymkent in Kazakhstan to Delhi.

It carried 27 passengers and 10 crew members, mostly traders heading to India.

The second aircraft was Saudia Flight 763, a Boeing 747 heading from Delhi to Jeddah in Saudi Arabia.

It had 289 passengers and 23 crew members, many of them Indian workers traveling to Saudi Arabia for jobs.

In total, 349 people were onboard the two planes.

None of them knew they were about to meet in the most horrifying way.

The Moment of Collision

At around 6:39 PM, both aircraft were flying on the same flight path near a waypoint over Haryana.

The air traffic controller had instructed:

The Kazakh plane to descend to 15,000 feet

The Saudi plane to maintain 14,000 feet

There should have been a 1,000-foot separation.

However, investigators later discovered that the Kazakh aircraft had actually descended to 14,000 feet instead of stopping at 15,000 feet.

At that moment, the two aircraft were flying directly toward each other.

Within seconds, the left wing of the Kazakh aircraft struck the left wing of the Saudi Boeing 747.

The impact was catastrophic.

The Boeing 747 began spinning and broke apart in the air before crashing near Charkhi Dadri.

The Kazakh aircraft also lost control and crashed nearby.

All 349 people on board both aircraft died.

Why the Crash Happened

Investigators found several factors:

• Miscommunication between the pilots and air traffic control

• Language barriers (the Kazakh crew mainly spoke Russian)

• The aircraft descended below the assigned altitude

• Radar systems at the time could not display altitude clearly

• The controller allowed only 1,000 feet separation, while modern standards require 2,000 feet in such situations

Changes After the Disaster

This disaster led to major aviation safety improvements worldwide.

The International Civil Aviation Organization introduced stricter rules, including:

Mandatory Traffic Collision Avoidance System (TCAS) in commercial aircraft

Improved radar systems that show both distance and altitude

Mandatory English proficiency for international pilots

These changes have since helped prevent many potential mid-air collisions.

Final Thought

This tragedy reminded the world how fragile life can be and how critical communication and technology are in aviation safety.

Even today, the 1996 Charkhi Dadri collision remains the deadliest mid-air collision in aviation history.

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About the Creator

Imran Ali Shah

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