Swapping shift with a colleague cost ethnic Indian flight steward Sanjid Singh Sandu his life. Sanjid, 41, had switched his shift with a colleague on the ill-fated Flight MH17 from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur which was shot down over Eastern Ukraine on Thursday.
According to his distraught father Jijar Singh, Sanjid’s mother had planned to cook her son’s favourite dishes upon his arrival in Penang, Malaysia. “My son spoke to me over the phone just before his flight. I didn’t know that would be my last conversation with him. What has happened has happened,” Jijar, with tears flowing, told reporters at his house in Penang.
Jijar and his wife received the news from their daughter-in-law, who is also a flight stewardess at Malaysia Airlines. He said Sanjid, fondly known as Bobby, was his youngest child and only son.
Flight MH17 took off from Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport on Thursday afternoon and was supposed to land in Kuala Lumpur on Friday morning.
Flight tracking data indicated that the plane was at its cruising altitude of 33,000 feet when it disappeared. The Boeing 777 is believed to have been shot down 50 km from the Ukraine-Russia border.
Image: Sanjid Singh Sandu, the flight steward aboard MH17.