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Seat 11A Mystery: Two Plane Crashes, Two Survivors, One Unbelievable Coincidence

In a bizarre and emotional twist of fate, a seat number has become the centre of a story stretching across countries and decades. Seat 11A, once just a number, is now at the heart of a haunting coincidence involving two devastating plane crashes and two survivors.

The connection? Thai actor and singer Ruangsak Loychusak, who survived the 1998 crash of Thai Airways Flight TG261, has revealed that the sole survivor of the recent Air India Flight AI171 disaster in Ahmedabad, Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, was seated in the very same spot 11A.

Seat 11A Mystery Two Plane Crashes Two Survivors One Unbelievable Coincidence

A Chilling Parallel Across Time

On December 11 1998, Ruangsak's flight crashed while attempting to land in southern Thailand. Out of 146 passengers, 101 died. Ruangsak, only 20 at the time, was among the few who made it out alive. For years, he struggled with post-traumatic fear, avoiding air travel and reliving the horror with every thundercloud.

Now, more than two decades later, another tragedy unfolds.

On June 12 2025, Air India Flight AI171 went down moments after takeoff from Ahmedabad, killing 241 people. The lone survivor, 29-year-old Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, a British Indian national, emerged from the wreckage bloodied, burnt, but alive. And again, it was seat 11A.

Social Media Reacts: "The 11A Enigma"

Ruangsak posted about the eerie coincidence on Facebook, writing, "The survivor of the plane crash in India sat in the same seat number as me 11A. Goosebumps." His revelation sparked a wave of online speculation and fascination. Soon, the phrase "11A Enigma" began trending as people across the world reacted to the uncanny pattern.

Aviation analysts suggest that seats near emergency exits like 11A sometimes offer higher chances of survival due to reinforced structure and quicker exit routes. In Vishwash's case, the door beside his seat was blown open, allowing him to escape through the wreckage.

He later told Indian media, "I thought I was going to die. When I woke up, I realized I was still breathing. I unbuckled myself and ran out."

One Seat Two Survivors Shared Trauma

For both men, surviving wasn't just physical. Ruangsak battled deep psychological wounds for years. "I couldn't fly. I'd see clouds and feel like I was in hell," he once said.

Vishwash is still hospitalised in Ahmedabad, slowly recovering. Yet both have spoken of their gratitude, and both acknowledge a strange shared destiny a second chance at life marked by trauma, luck, and the mystery of a seat number.

As the investigation into the Air India crash continues, the story of seat 11A has become more than a coincidence. It's a symbol of survival, an internet legend in the making, and a quiet reminder of how fate sometimes sits in the unlikeliest of places.

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