The crash took place at 0940 hours after one of the engines of the aircraft, DA42, got stuck in a rope-way, barely 20 minutes of its take-off from the Birsi Airport in Gondia district of Maharashtra.
Twenty-four-year-old Kalyani, from Karnal in Haryana, had completed 199 hours of flying training from the Gondia-based National Flying Training Institute (NFTI).
She was on the final sortie on the multi-engine DA42 aircraft, which crashed into river Wainganga near Gondia.
Her instructor, Capt Ranjan Gupta, a retired wing commander of the Indian Air Force, was a senior flying instructor with around 4,000 hours of flying experience, they said.
45-year-old Gupta, a native of Kolkata, also died in the crash of the 4-seater twin-engine aircraft.
He is survived by his wife and two children, a son and a daughter, both in school.
A flying instructor at another training academy, who had known Gupta and worked with him, described him as "the best fauji I have ever known".
The Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau, a wing of the Civil Aviation Ministry, has launched a probe into the accident, according to sources.
The bureau is mandated to probe all serious incidents and accidents involving Indian planes.
The trainer aircraft was flying at a height lower than the one permitted by the ATC, they said.
"The ATC had permitted the aircraft to fly at around 4,000-5,000 feet but it was at a much lower altitude. The aircraft had apparently developed a snag and for this reason the pilot was perhaps attempting a safe landing.
Meanwhile, a senior DGCA official said every year there are around 10-20 reports of incidents involving damage to the aircraft from flying clubs/academies.
"These incidents include damage to component system (of the aircraft), sometimes accruing from ill-maintenance," the official said, maintaining that casualties have been rarely reported over the last few years.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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