Family members of the deceased British citizens in the tragic Air India crash have been sent to the wrong bodies of their loved ones as per the Daily Mail. Two such examples have come so far where grieving families learned that the remains of some of their loved ones were misrepresented before returning to Britain.In an example, a family was clearly forced to cancel the funeral system of funeral, to find out that the coffin he had received was placed on the body of an unknown passenger, not according to their relative, according to the daily mail. In another incident, “Coming” remains of several crash victims were reportedly placed in the same coffin by mistake. Dr. Dr. of an internal West London, Dr. Errors came to light after Fiona Wilcox, which began to confirm the identity of rented British citizens after cross-checking their DNA with samples provided by families.One of the 261 people lost in Air India Flight 171 crashed only a few seconds after the takeoff from Ahmedabad N Marg for London’s Gatwick Airport, 52 British citizens. The Daily Mail said, “I am sitting in the homes of these beloved British families in the last month, and the first thing they want is returning to their loved ones,” said Heli-Prat, who is responsible for investigating and exposing the entire circumstances around the tragedy, Daily Mail said. He said, “Some of them have found wrong remains and they are clearly distraught over it. It has been going on for a few weeks (and) I think these families are worth a clarification,” he said. Pratt said, “Family X has no one to bury because it was a wrong person in his casket. And if he is not a relative, the question is, the question is, who is this coffin? It is probably another passenger and his relatives are given wrong remains,” Pratt said, referring to the family, who had to cancel the funeral.According to the report of the Daily Mail, the family that was obtained ‘Kaming’ remains was eventually able to separate them and move forward with a funeral service. Although the remains of almost all the victims have been recovered within three days of the incident, the extreme 1500 ° C heat during the accident severely burnt most bodies and left recognizable. Others were mutated or fragmented by the violent effects of the accident.This meant that many families found their close remains in plastic containers, instead of coffins from the Civil Hospital in Ahmedabad, report of the Daily Mail. In the most severe cases, the identity was matched using a dental records to assist in the process.After the accident, around 40 officers from Gujarat, including Forensic Science Directorate (DFS) and National Forensic Sciences University (NFSU), worked to match DNA samples.More than 50 experts from departments including forensic medicine, community medicine, microbiology, biochemistry and pathology were involved in testing. At the BJ Medical College, the rigid blood sample was collected.