Top Boeing executive Stephanie Pope visits Air India HQ to discuss plane crash, sources say

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

epa12175351 Indian people hold candles for the people who lost their lives in the Air India flight crash in Ahmedabad, during a candlelight vigil in Bangalore, India, 14 June 2025. Air India flight AI171, bound for London carrying 242 passengers and crew members on board a Boeing 787-8 aircraft, crashed minutes after take-off in the Meghaninagar area of Ahmedabad on 12 June. EPA-EFE/JAGADEESH NV

People in Bangalore holding a candlelit vigil on June 14 in for those who lost their lives in the Air India plane crash.

PHOTO: EPA-EFE

Follow topic:

The head of Boeing Commercial Airplanes, Ms Stephanie Pope, met the chairman of Air India on June 16 in India, two sources said, as the companies seek to find the cause of last week’s fatal crash involving a Boeing 787 Dreamliner.

Ms Pope met chairman N. Chandrasekaran at the airline’s headquarters in Gurugram, near New Delhi airport, and was accompanied by Boeing India president Salil Gupte, one of the sources said.

Details of the discussions were not immediately clear. They came four days after a London-bound Air India plane

crashed in Ahmedabad seconds after take-off

, killing all but one of the 242 people on board.

Ms Pope oversees design, production and delivery of advanced jetliners to Boeing customers around the world, according to the US plane maker’s website.

The 787 Dreamliner was fitted with GE engines, and GE Aerospace’s chief executive for commercial engines and services, Mr Russell Stokes, and its South Asia chief, Mr Vikram Rai, also met Mr Chandrasekaran on June 16, one of the sources said.

Boeing, in a statement to Reuters, declined to comment on Ms Pope’s visit and meeting with Air India but said it is “focused on supporting the investigation” and its customer.

GE and Air India did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests for comment. The sources declined to be named as the meetings were private.

The crash, the world’s worst aviation disaster in a decade, is the latest test for Boeing’s new leadership that has been working to reform the company’s public image and regain trust following a series of safety and production crises.

Air India, which has 33 Dreamliners in its fleet, is one of Boeing’s biggest customers, with more than 200 new planes on order, including 20 787s. REUTERS

See more on