Aviation regulator DGCA has imposed a penalty of Rs 30 lakh on Air India as well as suspended the license of pilot-in-command of flight in which a person allegedly urinated on female co-passenger
IndiGo carried 69.09 million passengers last year, compared to 67.9 million in 2019
After Airport authorities contacted the airline officials they were informed that the passengers were informed about the change in flight time via e-mail
Air India has said there was an error of judgment on part of its cabin crew and ground staff to identify the pee-on-board incident as a breach of discipline and it could have been handled better
Airline's report to National Commission for Women acknowledges delay in reporting incident to regulator
Aviation regulator Director General of Civil Aviation has asked the airlines to formulate a policy on carrying pets on flights and prominently display it on their websites for better understanding
In a surprise U-turn, Shankar Mishra, the man accused of urinating on an elderly woman co-passenger on an Air India flight, told a Delhi court on Friday he did not commit the offensive act. The claim by his lawyer, made for the first time since the sordid event unfolded on an Air India New York-New Delhi flight on November 26 last year, flies in the face of denunciation of the accused by some of the co-passengers and even a string of WhatsApp exchanges he had with the victim woman which suggested the unsavoury incident indeed took place. The counsel for the accused made the submission before Additional Sessions Judge Harjyot Singh Bhalla while arguing against a Delhi police petition seeking revision of an order passed by a magisterial court denying police his custodial interrogation. The judge disposed of the application, saying the submissions made before him did not seem to have been made in front of the Metropolitan Magistrate. He said police can approach the magisterial court wi
A senior DGCA official on Thursday told PTI that the regulator is looking into the incident and has sought a report from the airline
On-board incidents point to poor training
Aviation watchdog DGCA will seek a report from SpiceJet on an incident at Delhi airport this week where passengers of a Bengaluru-bound flight had to wait for a long time at the aerobridge. A passenger had shared on social media a video and his experience about co-passengers having had to wait for a long time at the aerobridge on Tuesday at the Delhi airport. It happened with passengers of SpiceJet flight SG 8133 from Delhi-Bengaluru. On Wednesday late evening, SpiceJet said the flight was delayed due to weather disruption that led to incoming crew exceeding their duty time limit. A senior DGCA official on Thursday told PTI that the regulator is looking into the incident and "will seek a report from the airline". In its statement on Wednesday, SpiceJet said the flight was delayed on account of weather disruption in the network and the aircraft's previous rotation. "As a result of this, the incoming crew was not legal to operate the subsequent flight to Bengaluru and crew was arran
DGCA said operations are normal at all airports in India, and "there does not seem to be a cause for concern" amid air traffic in the US getting affected due to a technical failure in the system
Here's what happens behind the scenes from the time of check-in to take-off
Chhawchharia had on January 2 sent a letter to JKC wherein he objected to Sanjiv Kapoor using designation of Jet Airways CEO as the airline is yet to be handed over to JKC
Passengers were accommodated on alternate airlines to Delhi and onward to other destinations," said the airline
While the passengers were left behind at Bengaluru, their bags were not offloaded from the aircraft as per standard operating procedures
Go First's Delhi-bound flight G8-116 left behind 55 passengers in a coach at Bengaluru airport
The regulator has issued the show cause notice to accountable manager/chief operation officer of Go First
According to the acquisition agreement signed with the government in January 2022, the airline is not allowed to change the "terms of employment" for one year
Officials said that the passengers were given an alternative to take the Air India flight at 10 am
This happened on Dec 6 when a male passenger urinated on a vacant seat and blanket of a female co-passenger