
Air India Fined for Safety Lapse (Image: AI generated)
India’s civil aviation watchdog, DGCA has fined Air India Rs 1crore for operating an Airbus aircraft eight times without a valid airworthiness permit, according to a confidential order. The regulator said the lapse has “further eroded public confidence and adversely impacted the safety compliance of the organisation.”
The aircraft involved was an Airbus A320. It carried passengers between New Delhi, Bengaluru, Mumbai and Hyderabad on November 24 and 25 without the mandatory Airworthiness Review Certificate (ARC). The ARC is a key document issued every year by the regulator after an aircraft clears required safety and compliance checks.
Air India’s own internal investigation into the incident, which Reuters had reported in December, found “systemic failures.” The airline admitted there was an urgent need to improve its compliance culture.
The penalty order, issued on February 5 to Air India CEO Campbell Wilson, stated that the incident had “further eroded public confidence and adversely impacted the safety compliance of the organisation.” The order was signed by Joint Director General of Civil Aviation Maneesh Kumar.
“The accountable manager on behalf of Air India is found blameworthy for the above lapses,” Maneesh Kumar wrote in the order, referring to Wilson. Air India did not respond to Reuters queries on the matter.
The airline has been directed to deposit Rs 1 crore, or $110,339, within 30 days. The development comes at a time when Air India is still dealing with the impact of last year’s major tragedy. In June, a Boeing Dreamliner crashed moments after take-off, killing 260 people in what was the airline’s worst disaster.
The internal probe into the Airbus incident also pointed to pilot lapses. It said the pilots who operated the eight flights did not comply with standard operating procedures before take-off, as Reuters has reported earlier.
Air India, owned by India’s Tata Group and Singapore Airlines, has also faced warnings from the aviation watchdog in recent months. These included concerns over operating aircraft without properly checking emergency equipment and other audit-related lapses.
(With inputs from Reuters)
Khalid Qasid is a media enthusiast with a strong interest in documentary filmmaking. He holds a Master’s degree in Convergent Journalism from AJK MCRC. He has also written extensively on esports at Sportsdunia. Currently, he covers world and general news at NewsX Digital.
Assam Emerging As Major Contributor To Stronger India-US Ties: Himanta Sarma
Himanta Biswa Sarma met US Ambassador to India Sergio Gor and said Assam can play…
Trump Suggests Possible Relief On Russian Oil Curbs, Says Iran War End Could Lower Prices
Donald Trump suggested that Washington could consider more measures to tackle rising crude oil prices.
India And Russia Set To Discuss Progress On Key Agreements At Jaishankar-Lavrov Meeting
Russia’s Foreign Ministry said, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar will…