Shockwaves from the January 28 Baramati crash, fatal for five including Maharashtra’s Ajit Pawar and attendant Pinky Mali, now include outrage from her father over MGR Ventures’ ghosting of kin. Shivkumar Mali’s Thursday outpouring reveals a support vacuum that amplified their torment.
TV screens delivered the death blow—no prior alert from employers. ‘They left us to discover it like any viewer,’ Shivkumar lamented. Pinky’s Tuesday chat brimmed with normalcy: Baramati with Pawar, Nanded next, hotel ring ahead. Fate intervened cruelly at touchdown.
Baramati hell: family treks 250 km solo, no company shadow. ‘Inhuman lapse,’ he roared, urging probes into landing crash on express route and total protocol breach. Friends aided; else, paralysis.
His backstory—Delhi job axed 1989, hardship tales shaping Pinky’s disciplined rise via training tiers—intensifies the quest for answers. ‘Why her? Truth owed to parents.’ Husband Somviker craved sensitivity alone; silence reigned.
From corpse transport to ambulances, all bootstrapped. This exposé spotlights aviation’s empathy deficit post-disaster. As crash inquiries accelerate, Shivkumar’s voice catalyzes reform: enforce notifications, aid mandates. Mechanical whys matter, but heartless voids scar eternally.