
BBC News, Delhi

Every time Aryan Asari hears the sound of the plane, he jumps out of the house to look for it.
Discovering that airplanes were a hobby for him, his father MaganbhaI Asari said. Aryan
But now, people’s thoughts made him sick.
Last Thursday, the 17-year-old made videos of the plane on the terrace of a house in Asari, Ahmedabad city, when an Indian Air Dreamliner 787-8 crashed and erupted before his eyes, hitting flames and killing 241 aircraft. Nearly 30 people were killed on the ground.
This moment was captured by Aryan on his cell phone.
“I saw the plane. It was coming down. And then it was swaying.” He told BBC Gujarati in an interview earlier this week.
The video is now a key clue to investigators trying to find a crash career, which has already rippled through the news media and placed Aryan, a high school student, at the center of one of the worst aviation disasters in the country’s history.
“We have been flooded with interview requests. The reporter is struggling day and night to ask to talk to him.”
This event – followed by the “destructive effect” on Aryan, who traumatized what he saw. “My son was so scared that he stopped using the phone,” Asari said.

Mr. Asari now works with the city’s Metro Services Department, a retired Army soldier lives near one near the airport for three years. He recently moved to a small room on the terrace of the three-story building, with a clear view of the city skyline.
His wife and two children – Aryan and his sister – live in the ancestral village near the border between Gujarat and Rajasthan.
“This is the first time Aryan has been in Ahmedabad. In fact, it is the first time in his life that he has left the village.”
“Whenever I call, Aryan asks me if I can spot planes from our terrace and I will tell him that you can see hundreds of streaks in the sky.”
Aryan, he explained, was an airplane enthusiast and loved watching them in the sky of his village. He could see more intimately from the terrace of his father’s new home that their thoughts were attractive to him.
It was an opportunity last week when Asari’s daughter wanted to be a policeman’s daughter headed to Ahmedabad to write entrance exams.
Aryan decided to accompany her. “He told me he wanted to buy a new notebook and clothes,” Asari said.
The siblings arrived at their father’s home around noon Thursday, about an hour and a half before the crash.
The family had lunch together, and then Mr. Asari went to work and left the children at home.
Aryan walked out of the terrace and began making videos of the house to show his friends. He told the BBC Gujarati that was when he discovered Air India planes and started shooting.
Aryan soon realized that the plane had nothing to do with the plane: “It was shaking, moving left and right,” he said.
He kept photographing the plane as it spiraled up and down, unable to grasp what was about to happen.
But when smoke filled the air and fires spewed out of the building, he finally realized what he had just witnessed.
He sent the video to his father and called him.

“He sounded scared-‘I saw dad, I saw it breaking down. “But he was next to him in horror. ”
Mr. Asari also asked his son not to share the video further. But Aryan was too scared and shocked to send it to some of his friends. “The next thing we know is editing everywhere.”
The next few days are family nightmare.
Neighbors, journalists and photographers flooded Mr. Asari’s little house in day and night, asking for a conversation with Aryan. “We can do nothing to stop them,” he said.
The family also received a visit from police, who took Aryan to the station and recorded his statement.
Mr Asari clarified that, contrary to the report, Aryan was not detained, but police asked him for hours.
“My son was very upset at that time and we decided to send him back to the village.”
Back home, Aryan resumed school, but “still didn’t feel like himself. His mother told me that whenever his phone rang, he was scared,” Mr. Asari said.
He added: “I know he will get better over time. But I don’t think my son will try to find a plane in the sky again.”
Other reports from Roxy Gagdekar in Ahmedabad (BBC Gujarati).
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