Showing posts with label Foreign Jan 2021. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foreign Jan 2021. Show all posts

Sunday, January 31, 2021

Karipur flight crash: Victims and families of deceased to approach foreign courts

Malappuram: The collective of Kozhikode flight crash victims and the families of the deceased will approach foreign courts in connection with compensation amount. A total of 21 people died in the crash including aircraft employees. 
The 19 passengers who died are from 17 different families. The families of 18 victims and other severely injured passengers will approach the courts in Dubai and America. As first step, the cases of Ayisha Dua, who died in the accident, and her mother Sumayya who was severely injured will be filed. Legal notices have been sent to Air India Express, New India Insurance Company and Boeing, which manufactured the flight before filing the case. 
 The families are planning to approach court as they did not get the right amount of compensation. 7 million Dollars is sought as compensation for Ayisha Dua, who died in the accident, and her mother Sumayya. They have decided to approach Dubai court since the flight took off from Dubai. And the case has also been filed at USA as it is the headquarters of Boeing company. 
 31/01/21 Mathrubhumi

Lockheed’s F-21 Fighter Showstopper at Aero India 2021

American defence giant Lockheed Martin has announced showcasing its F-21 multi-role fighter jet at the Aero India 2021 air show taking place on February 3 to 5 in Bangaluru. The F-21 fighter aircraft is on offer to the Indian Air Force (IAF).

According to Lockheed Martin press statement, the company is leveraging both 4th and 5th generation technologies to offer the best solution to meet or exceed the IAF’s capability needs, provide Make in India industrial opportunities, and accelerate India-US cooperation on advanced technologies, including but not limited to fighter aircraft. The F-21 demonstrates Lockheed Martin’s commitment in delivering an advanced, scalable single-engine fighter to the IAF – For India, From India, reads the statement.

The company’s exhibit at the 13th edition of Aero Show includes a broad span of state-of-the-art capabilities, including the MH-60R “Romeo” multi-mission helicopter, the S-76D helicopter, and the C-130J Super Hercules aircraft.

“Aligned with the Indian government’s ‘Atmanirbhar Bharat’ Abhiyaan and the ‘Make in India’ initiative, we look forward to participating in Aero India 2021 and reinforcing our commitment to supporting the growth of an indigenous defence manufacturing ecosystem while continuing to deliver our best capabilities to support the Indian MoD and Services,” said William Bill Blair, Vice President and Chief Executive, Lockheed Martin India. “We see tremendous strength and opportunity in India’s defence industry both public and private including start-ups and Micro, Small & Medium Enterprises (MSMEs). Aero India serves as an excellent platform for us to explore new partnerships and strengthen existing ones.”

The Indian Navy’s most recent rotary-wing acquisition, MH-60R “Romeo” Seahawk helicopter is the world’s most advanced maritime helicopter and brings vital anti-submarine and anti-surface warfare capabilities to the Indo-Pacific region. It is the largest contract Lockheed Martin has ever signed with India. The first batch of the MH-60R helicopters will deliver to India in 2021.

On display at the show will be India’s workhorse, C-130J Super Hercules airlifter. The IAF has been extensively using its fleet of 12 Super Hercules for humanitarian efforts in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as to support the movement of troops and material to support regional military operations.

31/01/21 Bharat Shakti


Saturday, January 30, 2021

India plans to sign air bubble agreement with more countries

A day after extending the suspension of international flights till February 28, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) on Friday said that India is planning to sign more air bubble agreement with countries like Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Saudi Arabia in the coming weeks. Notably, India has signed air bubbles with 24 countries so far. The move is aimed at enhancing the aviation sector which has been worst affected at this time of coronavirus pandemic. 

Till now, the country has signed air bubble agreement with Afghanistan, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Canada, Ethiopia, France, Germany, Iraq, Japan, Kenya, Kuwait, Maldives, Nepal, Netherlands, Nigeria, Oman, Qatar, Rwanda, Tanzania, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, Ukraine, and United States of America. 

As part of the air bubble agreement which is being operated under the Vande Bharat Mission, Indians can travel to more than 100 countries by taking connecting flights.

The DGCA on Thursday extended the ban on international flights till February 28 and said certain scheduled flights will be allowed on selected routes on a case-to-case basis.

“However, international scheduled flights may be allowed on selected routes by the competent authority on a case-to-case basis,” the Directorate General of Civil Aviation added.

29/01/21 India.com

America's B-1B Long-Range Heavy Bomber To Perform "Fly-By" At Aero India

Chennai: A United States' B-1B Lancer heavy bomber will perform a fly-by during Aero India air show at Yelahanka Air Force Station in Bengaluru.

The 13th edition of the Aero India international air show, organised by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) is scheduled to take place from February 3 to 5 at Air Force Station Yelahanka.

"Among the highlights of the show, a B-1B Lancer heavy bomber, of the 28th Bomb Wing based out of Ellsworth Air Force Base in South Dakota, will perform a fly-by," the US Consulate, Chennai, said in a statement on Friday.

The B-1B Lancer, a supersonic heavy bomber, is a truly remarkable aircraft, capable of carrying out missions worldwide from its bases in the United States, as well as from forward-deployed locations, according to the Consulate.

Don Heflin, US Charge d'Affaires, said that the United States' participation in the air show is another example of the deepening defence and strategic partnership between the US and India.

Mr Heflin will lead a high-level delegation of US Government officials and defence industry representatives to the event.

Leading US defence companies are also participating in Aero India 2021, including Aerospace Quality Research and Development LLC, Airborn Inc., Boeing, IEH Corporation, GE Aviation, General Atomics, Hi-Tech Import-Export Corporation, L3Harris, Laversab India, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and Trakka Systems.

"I am pleased to head this year's US delegation to Aero India to show our continued commitment to strengthening US-India defence cooperation, in line with India's status as a Major Defense Partner," Mr Heflin said.

"US participation in Aero India 2021 reflects our increasingly close bilateral defence ties and our shared vision of a free and open Indo-Pacific region," he added.

The consulate said that US participation in Aero India 2021 provides both the US industry and the US military services an opportunity to strengthen military-to-military relations and defence cooperation with India.

30/01/21 ANI/NDTV

Thanks to covid-19, Maldives became the hottest new travel

Thanks to covid-19, Maldives became the hottest new travel destination in 2020. Due to a travel ban to many popular tourist spots, wealthy Indians flocked to the island nation. Now, airlines are increasing their flight services to the island nation to cater to this demand.

More flights from Bengaluru to Male are expected to start from February. While Indigo will be increasing its frequency from three flights a week to daily flight, Air India would be restarting direct flights to Male from February 5. The national carrier had suspended the service following the outbreak of covid-19.

In order to cater to the growing popularity for the island nation, GoAir had commenced flight operations three days a week between Bengaluru and Male from November 1.

The Indian High Commission in Maldives earlier this month said that India was the top source market for Maldives tourism in 2020 with 62,905 tourist arrivals from India from six Indian cities and with five airlines operating. India’s market share during 2020 was 11.3 per cent.

30/01/21 Bangalore Mirror

SriLankan Airlines Fined By Delhi Court For Violating Indian Law

New Delhi: Patiala House Court has imposed a fine of Rs 50,000 against SriLankan Airlines for violating Indian law by not having an Internal Complaint Committee to address the matters of sexual harassment at the workplace.

Metropolitan Magistrate Dev Saroha said: "Considering the circumstances in which the company has shown utter disregard to the law of the land, it would be appropriate to impose a fine of Rs 50,000. In view of the observations, I sentence the company should pay a fine of Rs 50,000 to be paid to the complainant."

Earlier, the court had convicted SriLankan Airlines for the offence under Section 26 of Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition, and Redressal) 2013 for violating Indian law by not having an Internal Complaint Committee to address the matters of sexual harassment at the workplace.

Earlier, the Court had convicted ex-Regional Manager (India), SriLankan Airlines under section 509 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) for outraging the modesty of one of his junior colleagues at its Delhi division office while he was posted here.

Metropolitan Magistrate, while passing judgment in the matter relating to foreign airlines said, "I am of the considered opinion that the accused (SriLankan Airlines) has violated Section 4 (1) of Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act 2013 and is liable to be convicted under section 26 of the same."

The court had also observed that on the date of filing of the complaint, the airlines did not have the internal committee as per the said Act, neither had it any permanent committee in terms of Vishaka guidelines which were a set of procedural guidelines for use in India in cases of sexual harassment.

Court also noted that in the present case, the complainant has stated that immediately after the incident she made a complaint to a number of her seniors and waited for the action to be taken against the accused, who is a senior employee of the company.

She was thoroughly cross-examined by the defence. She has further stated that only after realising that no action will be taken against the accused she made a formal complaint. The complainant has been consistent in her explanation regarding the delay and she being a woman in a social setting like ours is often subjected to many pressure in matters like these, the Court further noted.

In the present case, not only the social dignity of the complainant was on line but also there must be some professional considerations, the accused being a senior officer of the company and her boss. Thus, the explanation given by the complainant is believable, Court said.

Advocate Ajay Verma representing the complainant/victim submitted that SriLankan Airlines was also not supportive to her and rather they tried to coverup. The victim instead of getting support from the airline was removed from service.

30/01/21 ANI/Business World

Friday, January 29, 2021

SIA allows Tata Sons to go ahead with solo bid for Air India, waives no-compete clause

New Delhi: Singapore Airlines (SIA), with which Tata Sons operates full-service airline Vistara, has reportedly waived off a non-compete clause, and is unlikely to partner with the holding company of the $113-billion (around Rs 8.34 lakh crore) coffee-to-cars conglomerate to bid for the beleaguered national carrier Air India.

In December, the Mumbai-based conglomerate had submitted an expression of interest (EoI) for the embattled airline. The no-compete clause was a hindrance to Tata Sons' solo bid for Air India.  Worth mentioning here is that the Centre in January 2020 had invited bids to sell 100 per cent of its holding in Air India and its international arm Air India Express and 50 per cent in ground handling joint venture Air India SATS Airport Services.

It has been reported that Tata had started the discussion with SIA to abandon a non-compete clause and join it in a bid for the troubled airline. The main reason for SIA’s hesitancy is said to have been the long-term funding that the debt-laden carrier will need to run operations, people with knowledge of the matter told ET. 

Tata Sons can’t bid without SIA’s nod and its waiver of the no-compete clause. Tata could opt for solo bid or go through its AirAsia India unit, in which it has been raising its stake, lowering that of joint venture partner AirAsia Bhd. Although there are some legal issues regarding the Tata Group using AirAsia India as the vehicle to buy Air India, the group can work around them, the financial daily mentioned citing executives.

29/01/21 ETNowNews.com


International Flights: India Extends Suspension of Regular Passenger Flight Services Till Feb 28

Taking preventive measures despite declining cases of coronavirus, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) on Thursday extended the suspension of scheduled international passenger flights till February 28. However, the DGCA allowed certain passenger flights on selected routes by the competent authority on a case-to-case basis. 

Issuing a notification, the DGCA said that the suspension of flights does not affect the operation of international all-cargo operations and flights specifically approved by it.

“However, international scheduled flights may be allowed on selected routes by the competent authority on a case-to-case basis,” the Directorate General of Civil Aviation added. 

The development comes at a time when the scheduled international passenger services have been suspended in India since March 23 due to the coronavirus pandemic. However, special international flights have been operating under the Vande Bharat Mission since May and under bilateral “air bubble” arrangements with selected countries since July.

28/01/21 India.com

UK flight restrictions explained: What passengers have to do

India has extended the restrictions on flights to and from the United Kingdom till February 14, allowing airlines to operate only 30 weekly flights between the two countries. Earlier, the restrictions, which were imposed since January 8, were in place till January 23.
Why did the government impose restrictions on UK flights? What do passengers arriving from the UK need to do?  Read >>


Air India Flying New Routes In Turbulent Times

Beleaguered national carrier Air India has added new routes to the United States, despite being on the verge of bankruptcy.

The airline is struggling with debt exceeding $8 billion and is on the government’s disinvestment list. Yet, in November, the airline started direct flights to San Francisco and Chicago from southern technology hubs Bengaluru and Hyderabad, respectively. The new flights come at a time when the airline industry as a whole is in a major slump during the pandemic.

“This actually gives me a mixed message,” said Shakti Lumba, a retired pilot and a former executive director at subsidiary Air India Express. “Is the government thinking back on the sale of Air India? Are they waiting for the Covid situation to settle down [and] then sell?”

India’s largest conglomerate, Tata Group, was among entities that submitted bids for the airline in December. The government had originally set Jan. 5 as the date when qualified bidders would be notified, but the Department of Investment and Public Asset Management has removed that deadline. When the government first invited bids for the airline in 2018, it received no responses.

Meanwhile, the airline is trying to raise as much as INR 225 crore ($30 million) through a short-term loan by Jan. 31 to refinance an earlier loan.

28/01/21 zenger.news/Tennessee Tribune

Boeing Gets US Approval to Offer F-15EX to India

New Delhi: Boeing has received a licence from the US government to offer its F-15EX fighter jet to the Indian Air Force, a senior executive said on Thursday.

Boeing will compete with Sweden’s Gripen and France’s Rafale among others for the Indian Air Force’s plan to buy 114 multi-role aircraft to replace its Soviet-era fleet.

Ankur Kanaglekar, director, India Fighters Lead, Boeing Defense, Space and Security, told reporters discussions on the F-15EX had taken place earlier between the two governments.

“Now that we have the marketing licence it allows us to talk to the Indian Air Force directly about the capability of the fighter. We have started doing that in a small way,” he said, adding conversations were expected to gather pace during the Aero India show next week.

India and the United States have built close defence ties, with the Indian military buying over $20 billion worth of weapons in the last 15 years.

Lockheed Martin is also pitching its F-21 fighter to the Indian Air Force, offering to build the plane in the country to win the deal estimated to be worth more than $18 billion.

Boeing is bullish on India for both its defence and commercial aviation businesses, even as the COVID-19 pandemic has hit demand for air travel, forcing airlines to first get their finances in order before ordering new planes.

28/01/21 Aditi Shah/Wire

Thursday, January 28, 2021

New COVID-19 strain: Govt extends restrictions on UK-India flights till February 14

New Delhi: Amid concerns over the new COVID-19 variant detected in the United Kingdom, the government has extended the restriction on flights between India and UK upto midnight of February 14, 2021.

"The competent authority has further extended the restriction on flights between India and UK upto February 14, 2021 (23.59 hrs)," the DGCA said in a release. "The other terms and conditions of the said letter shall remain unchanged,’’ it added. “UK carriers may file their bubble schedule accordingly to DGCA for approval," the release said.

The flight services between India and UK resumed from January 6, while those from the UK to India will re-commenced from January 8. Last month, these services were suspended to stop the spread of a mutant Covid-19 strain which was recently discovered in the UK.

Several countries, including India, had suspended flight services to the UK in the wake of the new mutant Covid-19 strain. The suspension commenced with effect from 11.59 PM on December 22.

28/01/21 ZeeNews

MHA, aviation min to decide on global flights

The aviation and home affairs ministries will jointly decide on “further opening up of international air travel of passengers,” the Covid guidelines issued by the ministry of home affairs on Wednesday said. The guidelines will come into effect from February 1.

Scheduled international flights were suspended on March 23 last year due to the pandemic. Since then, India has been allowed Vande Bharat Mission flights and has also formed air bubbles with over 20 countries. Bubbles are being created with more countries like Russia and talks are on with Singapore. All-cargo international flights are allowed and the DGCA approves flights on a case-to-case basis.

At present, airlines are allowed to deploy 80% of their pre-Covid levels of domestic operations. Air traffic within the skies (in terms of passengers) is back at 60% of pre-Covid level. India has been opening up its skies by following a strict Covid protocol . However, unlike domestic flights, the issue of resuming scheduled flights between two countries is something that has to be decided by both the countries.

28/01/21 Times of India 

Domestic air travel in India to return to pre-Covid level later this year; int'l by late 2023: Boeing

New Delhi: American aerospace major Boeing on Thursday said India and other emerging markets, especially in SE Asia, will drive economic growth globally in the long term and that domestic air travel in India has seen a much speedier recovery during the pandemic world than most other countries. It estimates domestic air travel here to return to pre-Covid (2019) levels later this year while international travel could do so by late 2023, depending on global travel restrictions based on the pandemic situation.

“The overall (air travel) demand will double in India by 2030. While robust economic growth, a rapidly growing middle class population and investment in infra will contribute to India’s airline growth, there are some headwinds too. These include financial health of airlines, a factor globally and here too, fuel price and currency (exchange rate),” Boeing India president Salil Gupte said.

India’s domestic air travel in passenger terms is currently back to 60% of pre-Covid levels. This has been fuelled mainly by pent up demand for visiting friends and relatives. Business travel here is expected to pick up faster than in other parts of the world, the US major feels.

“Passengers are returning to fly again. India has seen its air cargo market on narrow body aircraft explode during the pandemic with the carriage of vaccines and PPEs. Additionally, growth of e-commerce here is also contributing to the growth in air cargo market and this trend will continue,” Gupta said.

Boeing is in talks with the Indian Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) to get approval for the B737 Max to fly again. It has set up a simulator for training Max pilots at a facility in Noida near Delhi after that nod comes. The US and European regulators have approved the return to service of the Max. In India, financially frail SpiceJet is currently the only airline that has Max in its fleet and on order.

“We are working with each regulator and each customer airline globally (for Max return to service) according to their requirement and their timelines. We are in touch with the DGCA to ensure they have all the information required for this to happen,” he said, while declining to comment if the required corrective work and modifications — hardware and software upgrades — on the 13 B737 Max of SpiceJet in India has begun.

Asked if a foreign airline from a country where Max has been allowed to fly again can operate this aircraft for flights to India, Gupte said: “Airlines that plan to do so will have to discuss with the DGCA. That decision will be taken by the DGCA nad has been discussed with them.” India, senior aviation officials say, is in “no hurry and will take a decision of Max return service after considering all aspects in totality.”

28/01/21 Saurabh Sinha/Times of India

Singapore, India not discussing air travel bubble 'as Singaporeans understand it to be': CAAS

Singapore: Singapore is not discussing an air travel bubble arrangement with India as people here understand it to be, said the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore (CAAS) on Thursday (Jan 28). 

CAAS was responding to media queries regarding a CNBC interview with India's High Commissioner to Singapore P Kumaran, where he said negotiations were ongoing for an air travel bubble between the two countries. 

"I think there is a fair amount of interest on both sides to try and enhance the connectivity, which we have enjoyed over the years," said Mr Kumaran in the interview, which was posted on the CNBC website on Monday. 

There was a proposal to gradually restore such connectivity and a "draft under negotiation", he said, without elaborating. 

“Countries may have different understanding on what an air travel bubble is," said CAAS air transport director Daniel Ng. 

"Singapore is not discussing an air travel bubble arrangement with India as Singaporeans understand it to be," he added.  

28/01/21 Zhaki Abdullah/CNA

Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Delivered most planes to India in 2020: Airbus

New Delhi: India has seen among the fastest revival of domestic air travel globally, with only China ahead of it, after countries started allowing these flights by following Covid protocol. Thanks to this, Airbus says it delivered the highest numbers of aircraft — 57 — to Indian carriers in pandemic 2020, the European aerospace major’s (India & south Asia) president and MD, Rémi Maillard, has told TOI.

“Scheduled domestic flights here were suspended for two months from March 25 to May 25. Domestic air travel now back to 60% of pre-Covid level. No other region, except China, has seen that kind of swift recovery,” he said, while adding that he is “cautiously optimistic” about the industry which is “not yet out of the woods and is still bleeding cash.”

“A number of issues need to be taken care of (in India) like taxation and infrastructure. The pandemic will lead to people preferring to travel direct between India and rest of the world (something which was done largely by transiting via nearby mega hubs in the Gulf and southeast Asia). India has a huge domestic market that can reconfigure the contours of international air travel to and from the country in favour of Indian carriers if the required steps are taken in terms of taxation and infrastructure,” he said.

While Airbus has no plans to have a final assembly line in India — China has one, — the aerospace major says it is firmly committed to the make in India plan. “We are hopeful that India will contribute significantly technologically to the next-gen zero emission hydrogen-powered aircraft Airbus is working on.”

In pandemic 2020, Airbus had delivered 566 aircraft (wide plus narrow bodies) to 87 customers — 34% below its all-time high of 863 in 2019. Its Indian customers got over 10% came of those planes with IndiGo inducting 44 A320/21neos and the remaining 13 going to Vistara, AirAsia India and GoAir. “We are in discussion with some startup airlines in India for aircraft (for aircraft orders),” he said.

America’s Delta and China Southern were delivered 30 and 22 aircraft last year, respectively. While they took a mix of narrow and wide and bodies, Indian carriers took only single aisle A320 and A321neos. Airbus had delivered 566 aircraft (wide plus narrow bodies) last year to 87 customers — 34% below its all-time high of 863 in 2019 — of which 10% came to India.

27/01/21 Saurabh Sinha/Times of India

US citizen stranded in Dubai given 'exceptional entry' to India to attend dad's funeral

Dubai: An American national of Indian origin, who was transiting via Dubai International Airport (DXB), to attend his father’s funeral back home, was granted an exceptional entry to India because of the tragic circumstances amid the raging novel coronavirus disease (Covid-19) outbreak.

However, Naresh Ram, a US resident since 1996, was left stranded at DXB for over 48 hours.

Ram had left his home in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, immediately after he learnt of his father’s death at night last Thursday.

He reached DXB the following day since he wasn’t allowed to board the Bengaluru-bound flight because of the restrictions.

Rules stipulate that foreign nationals such as Ram and tourist visa-holders aren’t allowed entry into India because of the country’s stringent Covid-19 protocols.

At present, only Indian nationals, Overseas Citizenship of India (OCI) cardholders, and Person of Indian Origin (PIO) cardholders are allowed entry to the country.

Ram, who didn’t tick any of these boxes, had applied for a tourist visa prior to his departure from New York. But the Indian consulate in New York didn’t give approval for a tourist visa.

Ram went ahead with his trip since US nationals don’t need a visa to enter Dubai or any other emirates in the UAE.

The Consulate General of India in Dubai considered Ram’s case on humanitarian grounds and swung into action.

Ram flew to Bengaluru on Monday morning on the same Emirates Airlines' ticket after being stranded for over 48 hours.

27/01/21 DHanusha Gukulan/Khaleej Times

Cairn threatens to seize Indian assets overseas to collect $1.4 billion arbitration award

Just like US oil firm ConocoPhillips grabbed Venezuelan assets overseas to enforce an arbitration award, Indian bank accounts, airplanes and other foreign properties can be seized to collect USD 1.4 billion awarded to UK's Cairn Energy against Indian retro tax, according to a letter seen by PTI.

The British firm has begun identifying overseas Indian assets in case the Indian government fails to honour the arbitration award.

Cairn CEO Simon Thomson in the January 22 letter to Indian High Commissioner in London, with copies marked to Prime Minister''s Office, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman and External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, the arbitration award is "final and binding" and "the Government of India has an obligation to comply with its terms."

"As India is a signatory to the New York Convention, the award can be enforced against Indian assets in numerous jurisdictions around the world for which the necessary preparations have been put in place," he wrote.

In 2019, ConocoPhillips had moved US courts to seize Venezuelan state oil company PDVSA''s assets to collect USD 2 billion compensation it had won in an arbitration against Venezuela''s 2007 takeover of its assets.

Cairn has hired an agency to identify bank accounts and other assets, including potentially Air India planes and even Indian ships, that could be seized in case India fails to comply. Diplomatic properties however cannot be touched.

26/01/21 PTI/Business Today


Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Body of pilot found after small plane crashes near Boynton Beach Inlet

Boynton Beach, Fla: The body of a 24-year-old man has been found inside a small plane that crashed Sunday night near the Boynton Beach Inlet, the U.S. Coast Guard said.

Divers with the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office located the man's body inside the submerged aircraft, the Coast Guard said Monday afternoon.

The pilot has been identified as Abhishek Patter.

His family issued the following statement:

He was a computer engineer who quit that to peruse his dream to be a pilot, and spent his last moments in the Cockpit doing what he always wanted to do 'Fly'. His dad was also a pilot in the Indian Navy currently flying commercial after his retirement from the Navy. Abhishek Patter, the deceased pilot was training with a local flight school in Merrit Island to become a commercial pilot. He was on a routine solo night flight training mission when the accident occurred.

We are currently working with the local authorities to repatriate his mortal remains back to India to be cremated there.

Exclusive video from Chopper 5 on Monday morning showed the outline of the plane under the water about a mile offshore, with an orange buoy tied to the wreckage.

Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman Kathleen Bergen said the Piper PA-28 Cherokee was flying from Palm Beach County Park Airport in Lantana to Merritt Island Airport when it was reported to have crashed about 8 p.m. Sunday.

The Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office said the aircraft was located "pretty much intact" Monday morning in about 40 feet of water.

Authorities spent hours searching for Patter, who was piloting the plane.

The 24-year-old pilot's body was eventually found inside the plane about 11 a.m.

"I came down here to do some fishing and found out about the tragedy here," Louis Lobello said.

Lobello watched the search efforts Monday morning and said the Boynton Beach Inlet can be dangerous.

"The wind is blowing in and the tide is going out, so it makes it a little dangerous," Lobello said.

The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the cause of the crash.

25/01/21 Miranda Christian, Peter Burke, Matt Papaycik/WPTV


Pilot dies in ocean crash, with dream of following his dad into flight

Boynton Beach: He was a computer engineer, but the urge to fly like his father — a retired pilot for the Indian Navy who turned commercial pilot — was so strong. A year ago, Abhishek Patter left his job and home in India and went to Florida for flight school.

Just few days ago, the 24-year-old Patter was awarded his instrument rating at 2Fly Airborne school on Merritt Island in Brevard County, Florida’s Space Coast. Someone captured Patter’s wide grin on camera.

The pilot was flying a single-engine Piper PA-28 Sunday when it vanished about 8 p.m. while flying from Palm Beach County Park Airport in Lantana to Merritt Island Airport, according to a spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration.

Patter was the pilot who died, the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office confirmed Monday.

The plane had been airborne about three minutes when it crashed in the ocean, according to FlightAware, an online flight tracker. Someone called for help after seeing the plane sinking at sea, according to the U.S. Coast Guard.

“He spent his last moments in the cockpit doing what he always wanted to do — fly,” Pat Bhava, a family friend, told the South Florida Sun Sentinel on Monday.

Crews in a Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office helicopter spotted the mostly intact plane submerged 40 feet in the water at daybreak Monday. Hours later, divers pulled Patter’s body from the cockpit. Bhava said now the family is trying to get their son’s body home back in India.

According to FlightAware, the plane flew from Merritt Island to LaBelle, a city situated about 30 miles east of Fort Myers on Sunday.

The plane’s next stop was Lantana. Just before 8 p.m. Patter took off for a solo night training mission and was headed home to Merritt Island, said Bhava.

But just minutes into the flight, something went terribly wrong when the Piper plane went down.

Bhava, who said he served in the military with Patter’s father, said the pilot’s father phoned him from India on Sunday night, hoping he could help provide information after getting a call that his son’s plane went down.

Divers from the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office pulled the body from the cockpit at 11 a.m, the Sheriff’s Office said.

A witness saw the plane go down in the water Sunday night.

25/01/21 Eileen Kelley and Austen Erblat/South Florida Sun  Sentinel

Goa-London flight takes off with over 200 passengers

Panaji: The Centre granted some leeway for flights to the UK, permitting one Goa-London flight to depart on Monday morning from Dabolim airport with 217 passengers. The flight, operated by Air India, is the first flight this year to the UK under the air bubble agreement ever since the suspension of flights between the two nations due to the emergence of a new, highly infectious Covid-19 strain.

Goa airport director Gagan Malik said that the flight was a one-off case with flights between Goa and London remaining grounded till the end of January. The Centre continued to restrict the arrival of passengers from the UK and has permitted flights between India and UK to operate only from five metro destinations.

“The relief flight, the 94th so far, left from Goa international airport today early in the morning to the UK with 210 passengers and seven children under the Air Bubble agreement. No passengers came on the flight as only departure was permitted,” said Malik. “We assisted the passengers and ensured all health protocols were followed.”

Air India flight AI 1193 to London’s Heathrow airport departed at 2:29am and the aircraft, a Boeing 787 – Dreamliner, will return with passengers from London to Delhi Indira Gandhi International airport.

26/01/21 Times of India

Airlines wary of flying people from UK to Chennai

Chennai: Airlines have become cautious while boarding passengers from London to Chennai and other cities in the country as the Union government has instructed that passengers flying via transit airports should not be allowed.

Checks are also high Dubai, a popular transit hub, after an airline got penalised when a Covid-19 positive passenger flew from the UAE to Chennai recently. Airlines are checking documents at Dubai to find out if all passengers to Chennai are originating from Dubai or whether they are coming from the UK.

The heightened travel restrictions in London and document screening in Dubai have affected passenger confidence to travel abroad, said Basheer Ahmed of Travel Agents Federation of India (TAFI).

Earlier, passengers from London were allowed to fly via transit airports such as Paris, Frankfurt, Dubai, Abu Dhabi and a few others. Now this has been stopped as the government wants to restrict the number of passengers who land in Chennai, Mumbai and Delhi from the UK.

An airport official said the scrutiny of documents is high at airports abroad. “This has made travel a hassle for people, especially those who want to come from the UK because there are fewer direct flights to Chennai. Air India is flying while British Airways is resuming schedule only from next month. There is an uncertainty whether the flights will continue or not.”

“A majority of the people have to land in Mumbai and Delhi. But they have to spend more to travel to Chennai by domestic flights because domestic fares have increased,” said Ahmed.

A London-Chennai one-way ticket costs Rs 30,000 while London-Mumbai flight costs Rs27,000 for travel in the second week of next month because the route has more flights. However, passengers have to pay Rs 4,500 to 5,000 on the Mumbai-Chennai leg. Most of the travel is not booked much in advance as there is a need for registrations and approvals.

26/01/21 Times of India

Russia removes travel restrictions on India, Finland, Vietnam, Qatar

Russian Embassy on Tuesday confirmed that it has lifted the travel restrictions from India, Finland, Vietnam and Qatar imposed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

"For citizens of Finland, Vietnam, India & Qatar the restrictions on entry to Russia, imposed due to spread of COVID19, are being lifted. The corresponding order was signed by Chairman of the Russian Government Mikhail Mishustin on January 25, 2021," tweeted the Russian Embassy.

The Russian government's press statement specified that citizens of these states and those who have a residence permit will be allowed to enter Russia through air checkpoints.

Russian citizens, in turn, can also fly to any of these countries. Russia had imposed travel restrictions on March 16, 2020, amid a surge in coronavirus cases in the country.

26/01/21 ANI/ETNowNews.com

Friends say man arrested for living in airport was on a spiritual journey

Oklahoma: People who knew Aditya Singh during his time as a graduate student at Oklahoma State University were shocked to learn the man arrested after living in Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport for three months was the man they knew.

Jana Nelson is the Executive Director of the Mission of Hope homeless shelter, where Singh used to deliver restaurant food that would have otherwise gone to waste. When the News Press contacted Nelson to ask how she remembered Singh, she gasped at learning the man she had seen in the news was him.

She hadn’t made the connection between the bearded man in the mugshot and the soft-spoken, clean-cut professional who came to her in 2017 with a proposal to help feed her residents with food left over from Taylor’s Dining Room, a restaurant on the OSU campus.

“He was very professional acting,” Nelson said. “He was a very nice guy. He wanted to make sure people weren’t going hungry. He hated to see things go to waste. He had a big heart.”

Bailey Norwood, one of the professors who organized a multi-disciplinary Food Studies group at OSU, said Singh was involved in the group for a while but didn’t really stand out.

“He just seemed like a normal, rather quiet person,” Norwood said.

Singh was on the track of academic achievement, studying for his Ph.D. in Marketing at OSU’s School of Hospitality and Tourism Management.

Originally from New Delhi, India, he had earned a B.S. in Economics from the University of London and an M.A. in Economics from Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics.

At OSU, he taught undergraduate courses in International Business and Marketing and conducted research on sustainability, specifically ways to reduce food waste. His Three Minute Thesis presentation on “Food Waste: A Household, Societal and Environmental Problem” can still be seen on OStateTV at https://bit.ly/3qQSYhR.

But the friends he lived with in California after relocating in 2019 to spend some time before his visa expired, say he hungered for more than academic achievement.

He was on a spiritual path and wanted to do what he could to improve people’s lives, whether it was serving meals at a homeless shelter or running a 5K in his bare feet to draw attention to the plight of children around the world who don’t have shoes.

“He seemed to be on some type of buddhist mission type of thing,” roommate Carl Jones said.

Mary Steele, another friend and former roommate, said she and Singh often had spiritual discussions.

Steele said she spoke with Singh during his time living in the airport but didn’t believe he was actually staying there at first.

She doesn’t believe he meant any harm or realized what he was doing might violate the law. The man she knows as ‘Adi’ would never have knowingly done something illegal, she said.

Steele isn’t sure why he stayed in the airport instead of returning to India as planned.

He had wanted to stay in the U.S. but needed to return home, she said. Although his friends encouraged him to just stay in California, telling him no one would bother him there, he was adamant about doing things the right way so he would be able to come back when he wanted to.

She finds reports that he stayed because he was afraid to travel due to COVID-19 credible because he had gradually shown increasing concern about the virus, starting to wear his mask in the house and when he drove his car.

She thinks he might have been embarrassed to admit his anxiety to her.

Singh left Los Angeles on Oct. 19 and his friends thought he had returned to India.

On Nov. 25, he told Steele he was stuck at the airport but she says she didn’t think it was possible.

She spoke to him again in December and was shocked when he said he was still there.

She says she and Jones encouraged him to come back to California but he said he was on a Karmic journey, talking to people in the airport and helping them. They would sometimes give him food in return, she said.

It makes a sort of sense to her.

“He decided to get out of his intellectual world and moved into a spiritual path,” she said.

26/01/21 Michelle Charles/CNHI News/Stillwater News Press

Indian man arrested at Dhaka airport with fake UK visa

Dhaka: An Indian man was arrested at the Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport (HSIA) on Sunday night when he was trying to fly to London with a fake United Kingdom (UK) visa.

The man was identified Shakthivel, 26, a resident of Noida of West Bengal in India, according to information on his passport.

Sources at the airport said the counter staff became suspicious of the visa when Shakthivel went to the check-in at the counter of Biman Bangladesh Airlines for boarding. Later, they contacted the Immigration Liaison officer at the UK High Commission.

After scrutiny, the immigration liaison officer confirmed that the UK visa was forged. Shakthival was then handed over to the airport armed police.

Alamgir Hossain, the additional superintendent (ASP, operations and media) of AAP, said Shakthivel was handed over to the Airport Police station where a case was filed against him on early Monday.

Sources at the Immigration police said Sakhtival entered Bangladesh through Benapole on 20 January.

25/01/21 Prothomalo.com

Monday, January 25, 2021

Sharjah Airport Welcomes Indian Airline Vistara’s First Flight From Delhi

Sharjah Airport announced today that Vistara’s inaugural flight arrived from Delhi, India. Vistara, India’s leading airline, also operates daily flights between Mumbai’s International Airport and Sharjah Airport. The airport welcomed the inaugural flight with a traditional water cannon salute. 

Sharjah Airport hosted an esteemed reception in the "Lounge", in the presence of Dr Aman Puri, Consul General of India in Dubai, his accompanying delegation, as well as a number of airport officials. 

Sharjah Airport was chosen by Vistara for their new destinations due to its strategic location, its integrated infrastructure, and recent expansion that provides distinctive facilities that embody the airport's commitment to providing the highest standards of services to ensure the comfort and happiness of travelers.

25/01/21 Albawaba


Boeing commits to deliver commercial planes that fly on 100% sustainable fuels

New Delhi: Boeing is setting an ambitious target to advance commercial aviation's long-term sustainability, committing that its commercial airplanes will be capable and certified to fly with 100% sustainable aviation fuels by 2030. Boeing has previously conducted successful test flights replacing petroleum jet fuel with 100% sustainable fuels to address climate change's urgent challenge.

According to the Air Transport Action Group, the US Department of Energy, and several other scientific studies, sustainable aviation fuels reduce CO2 emissions by up to 80 per cent over the fuel's life cycle with the potential to reach 100 per cent in the future.

Sustainable aviation fuels are mixed directly with conventional jet fuel up to a 50/50 blend - the maximum allowed under current fuel specifications.

To meet aviation's commitment to reducing carbon emissions by 50 per cent from 2005 levels by 2050, airplanes need the capability to fly on 100 per cent sustainable aviation fuels well before 2050, the announcement said.

"Our industry and customers are committed to addressing climate change, and sustainable aviation fuels are the safest and most measurable solution to reduce aviation carbon emissions in the coming decades," said Boeing Commercial Airplanes President and CEO Stan Deal.

Boeing has been a pioneer in making sustainable aviation fuels a reality, partnering globally with airlines, industry, governments, and research institutions to expand limited supplies and reduce fuel costs. Boeing worked with airlines, engine manufacturers, and others to conduct biofuel test flights starting in 2008 and gained approval for sustainable fuels in 2011. In 2018, the Boeing ecoDemonstrator flight-test program made the world’s first commercial airplane flight using 100% sustainable fuels with a 777 Freighter, in collaboration with FedEx Express.

24/01/21 Akarsh Verma/India Today

Air Canada Adding New Montreal To New Delhi Route

Air Canada looks to be starting a new direct service from Montreal to New Delhi starting this Spring. While there is yet to be an official announcement from the carrier, travelers can now book this route on the Air Canada website. Here’s everything we know about the new service.

Air Canada is planning to connect the largest city in Quebec to the Indian capital soon. The airline has begun listing a thrice-weekly service from New Delhi to Montreal starting from 18th April. When confirmed, this would mark Air Canada’s third direct route from India after Toronto and Vancouver.

The new service, listed as AC 50 and 51, will be flown using the trusted Boeing 787-9, which also flies other routes between India and Canada. The aircraft features a three-class layout with economy, premium economy, and business class.

Currently, AC 51 will depart New Delhi at 07:00 AM on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, landing in Montreal at 11:30 AM. The return flight will leave Montreal at 19:20 on Tuesday, Thursday, and Sunday, landing in Delhi at 17:55 the next day. Flight time takes 13 to 14 hours each way (depending on the direction).

Last October, Air India announced its six-month schedule between India and Canada, the first time it had done so since the pandemic. Most schedules have been only for few months or less. The long-term planning still falls under the travel bubble agreement and does allow airlines to establish semi-normal schedules on their routes.

25/01/21 Pranjal Pande/Simple Flying

Oxford Vaccines from Serum, India:50 lakh shots arrive today

With all uncertainties over obtaining Covid vaccines removed, the main challenges for the government ahead are to run the mass inoculation campaign smoothly and involve people in the process, say experts.

Bangladesh has already received 20 lakh doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine as a gift from the Indian government. And the first consignment of 50 lakh doses of the same vaccine called Covishield arrives in Dhaka today from Serum Institute of India.

The country has so far purchased three crore doses from Serum through Beximco Pharmaceuticals Ltd, local agent of the Indian firm.

A special flight of Air India carrying the first consignment of vaccine shots is expected to land at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport at 11:30am today, Nazmul Hassan Papon, managing director of Beximco Pharmaceuticals Ltd, told The Daily Star yesterday.

The vaccine shots will then be transported to Beximco warehouses in Tongi before being dispatched to the government-designated destinations.

25/01/21 Mohammad Al-Masum Molla/Daily Star

Sunday, January 24, 2021

Bound for Netherlands? Get tested 4 hours before flight

New Delhi: Flyers travelling to the Netherlands are now required to undergo a Covid test within four hours of their flight departure time at the origin. This is in addition to the existing requirement of getting an RT-PCR test done within 72 hours of arrival time in Holland.

A negative result from the new 4-hour pre-departure test will be needed to board flights to the Netherlands. The rule is effective immediately and is the latest in the tightening of testing norms by various countries after the emergence of new and more infectious strains of coronavirus.

India has an air bubble arrangement with the Netherlands and France and Air France-KLM operate flights under that along with Air India.

24/01/21 Times of India 

'Very Grateful': French Envoy Thanks India For Shipping COVID Vaccines To Fight Pandemic

French Ambassador to India Emmanuel Lenain thanked India for supplying medicines to France at the time of pandemic. During the ongoing India-France bilateral exercise "Desert Knight 21", Lenain said, “During COVID-19, you (India) shipped medicines needed in French hospitals. We are very grateful for that again... Very clear statements were released by your government and Prime Minister (Narendra Modi) when our values like secularism were under attack in my country”. The air exercises are going on at Air Force Station Jodhpur, from January 20 to 24.

He also spoke about bilateral ties as he said, “India and France have been side-by-side in both good and bad times. When India decided to conduct a nuclear test in Pokhran, we were on your side as we understand your strategic autonomy”.

The joint drills, which are a part of Desert Knight 21, mark a significant milestone in the series of engagements between the two air forces.

As part of Indo-French defense cooperation, the Indian Air Force and the French Air and Space Force held six editions of military exercises named "Garuda" at Air Force Base Mont-de-Marsan in France. The two forces have been using opportunities to conduct "hop-exercises" in order to further the existing cooperation. India had hosted the French Air Force deployment at the air force stations in Agra and Gwalior for exercise while ferrying to Australia for Ex Pitchblack in 2018. The French forces for Ex Desert Knight-21 are deployed in Asia as part of their "Skyros Deployment" and have ferried in forces to Air Force Station Jodhpur.

24/01/21 Akanksha Arora/Republicworld

Two new airlines begin flights to Sri Lanka

Two new airlines have begun flights to Sri Lanka while five others await approval, Manager Air Services and Traffic Rights at the Civil Aviation Authority of Sri Lanka (CAASL) Ishara Gunawardana said.

He said Ethiopian Airlines and Maldivian Airlines started operations to Sri Lanka last month.

Ethiopian Airlines mainly carry cargo and will also bring down UN officials to Sri Lanka, while Maldivian Airlines is currently operating to theMattala Rajapaksa International Airport for ship crew exchanges.

“GoAir, an Indian airline, has obtained the licence and is yet to start operations,” Gunawardena said.

24/01/21 Aanya Wipulasena/Daily News

Biggest Case Of Drug Seizure In India: 2 Ugandan Men Held At Delhi Airport With Heroin Worth Rs 68 Crore

Customs officials on Sunday arrested two Ugandan nationals for allegedly trying to smuggle heroin worth Rs 68 crore into the country at the Indira Gandhi International airport, an official statement by the department said.

It is believed to be one of the biggest drug busts of heroin/narcotics at any international airport across the country, the department said.

On suspicion, two Ugandan nationals coming from Entebebe via Doha were intercepted by the air customs officers at the IGI airport on Sunday, it said.

While searching the checked-in bags of the two passengers, a total of 51 pouches containing 9.8 kgs (approx) of white powdery substance, suspected to be narcotics was recovered, the statement said.

"When this material was subjected to a diagnostic test, prima facie it appears to contain commercial quantity of heroin, valued at Rs 68 crore," it added.

The accused, both in their mid-thirties, were handed over a bag containing heroin in its false cavity by their sister in Uganda, a customs official said.

24/01/21 Outlook

Saturday, January 23, 2021

Cambodia, India agree to start direct flights, tourism exchanges

Phnom Penh: Cambodia and India have agreed to start direct flight connections and promote closer tourism exchanges and cooperation in all areas after the Covid-19 saga comes to a close.

The agreement was reached during a meeting between Cambodian Minister of Tourism Thong Khon and newly-minted Indian ambassador to Cambodia Devyani Uttam Khobragade on January 20 at the ministry.

Khon said the two countries have had a long history of cultural and religious ties, with scores of Cambodians enjoying religious tours to holy sites across India prior to the pandemic.

He asked the Indian government to reschedule religious tour packages after Covid-19 cases had been “completely brought under control” to foster active tourism cooperation.

Khobragade stressed that a direct air route connecting the two countries is one of her priorities and expressed her keenness to work with the ministry and others stakeholders to ensure its success.

She said: “I fully agree and support this initiative because it will bring a lot of benefits to the tourism sector, considering how young Indians nowadays really like these kinds of tourism tours.”

Khmer Angkor Tour Guide Association (KATGA) president Khieu Thy told The Post on January 21 that direct flights with the world’s soon-to-be most populous nation would be a boon for the Kingdom.

Visits to ancient Khmer temples remain all the rage among Indians, he said, noting how closely related the religions that inspired their construction are with those of India.

“The number of Indian tourists coming to Angkor Wat has increased every year and this will create more jobs for local people,” Thy said, not accounting for 2020.

However, he asserted that Indian visitors could be a tad more frugal, querulous and demanding, requiring extra attention. “Due to the class divisions of Indian society, most tourists consider themselves as deities who require the utmost care.”

23/01/21 Phnom Penh Post/Star

Friday, January 22, 2021

Russia to resume air travel with India, Vietnam, Qatar and Finland from January 27

Flights between India and Russia are set to resume soon. As per the latest reports, Russia has now permitted flights within the country, as well as international services from Russia to India, Finland, Vietnam, and Qatar. These flights will start operations from January 27.

Referring to this, the Russian Emergency Response Centre, chaired by Vice Prime Minister Ms Tatiana Golikova, decided to resume international flights on a reciprocal basis with a number of countries from January 27, 2021, including India. Return flights between Moscow - Delhi will be operated twice a week.

A statement that has been shared, following a meeting of the government's Coronavirus HQ, said that the selected four countries had been witnessing fewer than 40 new cases per fortnight per 100000 people. As per the Russian authorities, they have decided to resume flights between Russian capital and Hanoi, Helsinki, Delhi, Doha after a certain criterion had been met. Flights will also resume between the Russian capital and New Delhi, Helsinki, Hanoi and Doha. They added that resumption of air services with these countries is a result of the observation that they have witnessed a drop in their respective infection rates.

Russia's Federal Air Transport Agency further announced that airlines will be allowed to resume twice weekly services from Moscow to the cities of Hanoi, Delhi, and Helsinki. However, airlines from Russia to Doha will be allowed three weekly services. The air transport agency also approved two weekly services from Saint Petersburg to Helsinki.

22/01/21 Times of India

IndiGo 8th biggest airline in terms of flights this month; UAE-India second busiest route

New Delhi: The UAE-India corridor has emerged as the second busiest country pair this month, with Mexico-US the biggest in terms of seats deployed by airlines flying between two countries, according to UK-based air consultancy firm OAG.

IndiGo is currently the world’s eight biggest airline globally and Delhi Airport the 12th biggest, in terms of capacity deployment by airlines.

OAG data airlines flying between Mexico and US have deployed 33 lakh seats this month. India-UAE is at second spot with almost 10 lakh seats. Mexico-US seat deployment this January by airlines has returned to almost the same level of same month last year month with marginally 1% lower.

However, India-UAE seats deployment is 48% lower than January 2020.

Almost all big Indian carriers like IndiGo, Air India, SpiceJet, Vistara and GoAir and UAE ones like Emirates, Etihad and flydubai currently flights operate between the countries under an air bubble arrangement.

In terms of number of flights scheduled to be operated this January, American Airlines is at number one with 1.1 lakh flights (43% less than January 2020) followed by Delta, United and Southwest at a lakh, 77,000 and 62,500, respectively.

The big four US carriers are operating the maximum number of flights this month. They are followed by the three Chinese carriers — China Eastern, China Southern and Air China.

21/01/21 Saurabh Sinha/Times of India

Air India Express announces new international flights

The carrier will be operating flights between Mumbai and Kuala Lumpur on February 8 and 22, 2021.

The flight will depart from Mumbai at 1000 hours (local time) and arrive in Kuala Lumpur at 1740 hours (local time). The flight from Kuala Lumpur will depart at 1840 hours (local time) and land in Mumbai at 2055 hours (local time).

From February, Air India Express will be operating flights between Chennai and Kuala Lumpur, on  Thursdays.

The flight will depart from Chennai at 0930 hours (local time) and arrive in Kuala Lumpur at 1625 hours (local time). The flight from Kuala Lumpur will depart at 1725 hours (local time) and land in Chennai at 1920 hours (local time).

The airline has also announced multiple flights from Riyadh to India. Bookings are open for travel until March 2021.

21/01/21 Business Traveller

French aerospace major Safran upbeat on India

Hyderabad: French aerospace and defence major Safran is upbeat on India as it executes a huge pipeline of orders across civilian, defence and space and plans to expand facilities and set up a new maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) unit.

The €24.6 billion revenue company, which supplies its engines for Rafale fighter jets and LEAP family of engines for civil aviation, expects to step up sourcing to €200 million as its expands its supplier base across SMEs.

Alexandre Ziegler, Senior Executive Vice President, International and Public Affairs, Safran Group, said, “I see India and France as strong partners and Safran, with its wide range of customers, is upbeat on the business prospects both for supply of engines in civilian aircraft and also for defence, including fighter jets and helicopters.”

“We have over 600 civil planes flying in India with our engines and have an order book of over 500 engines, which we expect to deliver over next few years. Though the aviation sector has been hit by the pandemic, we believe that it will bounce back by 2022-23. Towards this, we have set up a manufacturing facility in Hyderabad and are considering setting up of a MRO facility in India,” he told Business Line.

The MRO facility could entail an investment outlay of about €150 million. Ziegler said, “Safran has a presence in India of over 60 years in the core markets of aerospace and defense. It has a workforce off over 600 employees in the country. While expanding Safran’s footprint in India, it is committed to the “Make in India” programme fostering the development of partnerships with a wide array of customers.”

22/01/21 V Rishi Kumar/Business Line

flydubai barred from bringing passengers to Chennai till January 31 after passenger tests Covid positive

New Delhi: Tamil Nadu has barred UAE's flydubai from flying in passengers to the state till the month-end after the budget carrier brought a Covid positive passenger to Chennai this Sunday (January 17).

The state government has also written to the Union aviation ministry to examine how this happened in violation of Tamil Nadu's entry norms for those flying in from abroad, said senior officials.

This is perhaps the first instance of an Indian state barring a foreign airline from flying in people for violating its Covid rules.

Indian carriers have been barred a few times during the pandemic for varying periods of time by Hong Kong and UAE for inadvertently flying Covid positive passengers there. Saudi Arabia allows Indian carriers to only fly out people from there to India and not to the Kingdom.

UAE requires people flying in from several countries including India to undergo a Covid test 96 hours before their flight departure time and only those with negative reports are allowed to board flights for there. Chennai has a similar rule.

Additionally, there is testing on arrival in Dubai for those coming from India and many other countries.

"This person got a Covid test done from a certified lab in Chennai last Friday (Jan 15) and tested negative. He then travelled flydubai to Dubai. His on-arrival testing in Dubai gave a positive report," said sources.

The passenger was then asked to quarantine himself as per rules, with the positive report uploaded on the app travellers to Dubai need to install on their smartphones.

"On January 17, this person went to Dubai Airport and showed his two day old negative report for being allowed to board a flydubai flight to Chennai. Since the report was from a test done within 96 hours before departure for Chennai, he was allowed to board the flight as per rules of Tamil Nadu," said sources.

On arrival in Chennai this passenger reportedly cleared both immigration and health checks by showing his negative report.

"He was stopped at customs for baggage checks. To avoid the same, the passenger said he is Covid positive and showed his report from the test done on arrival in Dubai which was in his phone app. That is how it was known he was actually infected with the virus," said sources.

22/01/21 Saurabh Sinha/Times of India

Two flights with Covishield vaccine depart from Mumbai airport to Brazil, Morocco

New Delhi, Jan 22 (PTI) Two flights, each carrying two million doses of Covishield vaccine, departed from the Mumbai airport for Brazil and Morocco in the early hours of Friday.

India is one of the world''s biggest drugmakers, and an increasing number of countries have already approached it for procuring coronavirus vaccines.

"The Covishield vaccine, manufactured by the Serum Institute of India, departed from Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport (CSMIA) carrying 2 million doses to Brazil via Emirates Sky Cargo and 2 million doses to Morocco on Royal Air Maroc," said a press release by CSMIA.

As of January 22, CSMIA has facilitated movement of over 14.17 million doses of the Covishield vaccine across various international and domestic destinations, it mentioned.

Since Wednesday, India has been sending COVID-19 vaccines under grant assistance to Bhutan, the Maldives, Bangladesh, Nepal, Myanmar and Seychelles.

22/01/21 PTI/Outlook

First for Indian infra majors: GMR Group builds its second airport terminal in Philippines

New Delhi: The GMR Group has built a new passenger terminal building (PTB) at Clark International Airport (CIA) near Manila, its second project in Philippines.

This terminal, built with a capacity to handle 80 lakh passengers annually and expected to decongest Manila’s Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA), was handed over to Philippines government’s Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) on Friday. The capacity of this terminal can be further expanded to handle 1.2-1.6 crore passengers annually.

GMR Airports, India’s largest private airport company in India, is the only Indian airport developer to have developed and operated airports outside India. It is in a JV with Megawide Construction Corporation of Philippines operating and developing Mactan Cebu International Airport, the second largest airport of Philippines.

GMR Group subsidiary, GMR Airports, says its JV with Megawide Construction Corporation has built the over 1.1 lakh square metre terminal in a record time of 24 months during the pandemic. “It is one of the fastest completed projects in the Philippines and first project of the Philippines government under the hybrid PPP framework… (CIA) has the potential to emerge as a future destination for direct flights to and from India,” it says.

GMR Group chairman of energy and international airports, Srinivas Bommidala, said: “We feel proud to be part of (Philippines) president Duterte’s ‘build-build-build program’ through the development of Clark Airport and would very keen to further contribute in growth of aviation sector of the country through more projects. We are delighted to have been able to complete the new passenger terminal building in a record time of 24 months and hand over to BCDA successfully. Adhering to GMR’s concept to showcase local culture at the airport, the new terminal will give a rich feel of the Philippine culture. It has been designed and constructed using the latest innovative technologies and as per international standards and environmental best practices.”

22/01/21 Saurabh Sinha/Times of India

2mn Covid vaccine doses from India reach Dhaka airport

Dhaka: Two million doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine made by the Serum Institute of India arrived in Dhaka on Thursday as a gift from New Delhi.

The Air India charter flight 1232 from Mumbai carrying the consignment landed at Shahjalal International Airport in Dhaka at 11.20 a.m. on Thursday.

In a tweet, Indian Minister of External Affairs S Jaishankar said: "Touchdown in Dhaka.

#VaccineMaitri reaffirms the highest priority accorded by India to relations with Bangladesh."

The vaccines which came as a gift will be handed over at a formal ceremony at State Guesthouse Padma on Thursday afternoon.

Bangladesh Foreign Minister AK Abdul Momen, Health Minister Zahid Maleque, State Minister for Foreign Affairs Md Shahriar Alam, High Commissioner of India to Bangladesh Vikram Kumar Doraiswami and other high government officials will be in attendance.

The Serum Institute of India has produced the Covid-19 vaccine developed by the University of Oxford and drugmaker AstraZeneca.

On January 8, Bangladesh approved the procurement of 30 million doses of Covishield vaccine from India.

21/01/21 Sumi Khan/Daijiworld

Thursday, January 21, 2021

2 million Covid vaccine doses from India reach Dhaka airport

Dhaka: Two million doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine made by the Serum Institute of India arrived in Dhaka on Thursday as a gift from New Delhi.

The Air India charter flight 1232 from Mumbai carrying the consignment landed at Shahjalal International Airport in Dhaka at 11.20 a.m. on Thursday.

In a tweet, Indian Minister of External Affars S Jaishankar said: "Touchdown in Dhaka.

#VaccineMaitri reaffirms the highest priority accorded by India to relations with Bangladesh."

The vaccines which came as a gift will be handed over at a formal ceremony at State Guesthouse Padma on Thursday afternoon.

Bangladesh Foreign Minister AK Abdul Momen, Health Minister Zahid Maleque, State Minister for Foreign Affairs Md Shahriar Alam, High Commissioner of India to Bangladesh Vikram Kumar Doraiswami and other high government officials will be in attendance.

The Serum Institute of India has produced the Covid-19 vaccine developed by the University of Oxford and drug maker AstraZeneca.

On January 8, Bangladesh approved the procurement of 30 million doses of Covishield vaccine from India.

"So, there would be plenty of vaccines in the country, we're quite assured now. We can start the vaccination programme ahead of the schedule," Momen told IANS.

Momen added that more countries including Russia and China, were interested in providing vaccines.

21/01/21 IANS/Times of India

Vistara Airlines Set To Launch Two Routes To Sharjah

Vistara is launching two new routes to Sharjah, UAE, expanding its presence in the country. The carrier plans to add flights from Delhi and Mumbai starting this week, in addition to its services to Dubai. Let’s find out more about these new flights and why Vistara is focusing on the Middle East.

Vistara officially inaugurated its first route to Sharjah yesterday, flying from New Delhi. Later this week, on January 24th, the airline will also begin operating its Mumbai-Sharjah route. Notably, both routes will operate every day, even more than Vistara’s current flights to Dubai (which are four-times-weekly).

Sharjah is the third-most populous city in the UAE and less than an hour away from the bustling Dubai. The city is home to over a million expatriates, many of whom are from India, making the city a prime market for both business and leisure travel. The last year has seen extremely high demand for flights between the Middle East and India as many expatriates return to or leave countries.

While Sharjah may have strong demand, it also comes with tough competition. Air India Express, a major operator to the Middle East, flies to Sharjah from 11 cities across India, including Delhi and Mumbai, giving it favorable connectivity. Additionally, IndiGo, GoAir, and Air Arabia also operate flights to Sharjah. Clearly, there is no shortage of competition on this route.

As mentioned, Vistara will operate one daily service each from Delhi and Mumbai to Sharjah, starting from this week. 

As international travel remains highly restricted due to the border closures, airlines have focused on routes from India to the Middle East. India currently has travel bubble agreements with several countries in the region (UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, and more), allowing for flights to operate relatively normally.

21/01/21 Pranjal Pande/Simple Flyhing

Airlines to reconnect Seychelles from March

Mumbai: From March-end, the Seychelles archipelago is set to be reconnected with India with airline flights flying non-stop between Mumbai and Mahe twice a week, said an Air Seychelles official, adding that an air travel bubble between the two countries has been signed. That would add another outbound destination to the teeny list of foreign destinations that Indian tourists, who rely solely on airline flights, can travel to during the pandemic.

Currently too Seychelles is open to Indian tourists -- those who fly into the island country onboard chartered flights or private aircraft with a negative RT-PCR test report in tow, that is. Tourists from India flying in on airline flights from March-end onwards too would need to carry a negative Covid-19 PCR certificate with the test taken maximum of 72 hours prior to departure, said a Seychelles Tourism Board (STB) official.

Seychelles, which recently launched its Covid vaccination programme, announced on Wednesday that the island country has “re-opened borders to all countries worldwide with immediate effect”. In the coming months, the country will be simplifying and relaxing some of the restrictive measures to relaunch its tourism industry.

21/01/21 Times of India

Qantas eyes direct flights to India for post-COVID growth

Qantas could launch direct flights to India as part of a new international network reshaped by COVID-19 as the airline seeks to tap into fresh opportunities in the post-COVID world.

Buoyed by a growing population and rapid economic development, India's middle class is set to soar from around 80 million today to a staggering 580 million people - or some 40% of the population – by 2025.

And while the country has in the past posed a challenge for Qantas, the tide – and the profit margin – could be turning.

"India is always a hard market to service, because Indian traffic is spread through so many different cities in India," Qantas Group CEO Alan Joyce reflected at the recent Reuters Next online forum.

"We've tried to serve it in a number of different ways previously – we had Sydney-Mumbai direct, and Sydney-Darwin-Mumbai at one stage when I was running the network for Qantas, and it never made any money."

"But we are always keeping an eye on it," Joyce said. "We think at some stage, India – with the traffic levels, the economic activity and the links with Australia – will get to a sustainable service, and we think when it reaches that points we’ll add it on."

Joyce said that as part of Qantas' flight path out of COVID-19 "we’re going to be looking for new international opportunities, and India’s just a matter of time... (but) we have to wait and see what happens after the COVID outbreak, which markets respond and grow back."

India is within reach of Qantas' Airbus A330 and Boeing 787 jets, and Qantas has already flown the Boeing 787 to New Delhi as a special charter service to bring home Australians stranded in India as international borders closed.

"Qantas is well positioned to take advantage of the opportunities internationally, and we will have the flexibility to add capacity to markets where we think those opportunities are," he added.

Before the coronavirus, Air India offered the only direct link between Australia and India with flights from Sydney and Melbourne to New Delhi, while Oneworld member SriLankan flew between Melbourne and Colombo, with over a dozen onward flights across India.

21/01/21 David Flynn/ExecutiveTraveller

Wednesday, January 20, 2021

UAE-India flights for as low as Dh300 announced

Sharjah: Sharjah carrier Air Arabia is offering flight tickets to India for as low as Dh300 one-way all inclusive.

The discounted fares come at a time when forecasts for the rebounding of UAE's travel and tourism sector continue to strengthen.

The airline also recently announced a free global Covid-19 cover for all passengers travelling on its flights from Sharjah.

This cover is automatically included with the booking and no additional documents are required from passengers.

Valid for 31 days from the day of departure on the itinerary, it also includes medical expenses and quarantine costs.

20/01/21 IANS/Gulf News

COVID-19: Vaccine shipment from India arrives in Maldives

The first shipment of COVID-19 vaccines extended by the Indian government, on Wednesday, arrived at Velana International Airport (VIA) at approximately 1440 hrs.

The Indian consignment, delivered via an Air India flight, contained Oxford Astrazeneca's COVISHIELD vaccine produced by Serum Institute of India, which are intended to cover frontline health workers and senior citizens.

Indian High Commissioner to Maldives Sunjay Sudhir handed over the shipment of vaccines in a special ceremony held at VIA.

In his speech, the high commissioner stated that the arrival of COVID-19 vaccines marked another milestone in India-Maldives bilateral relations. He emphasized the fact that Maldives had received the vaccine within 96 hours of its country-wide rollout in India.

High Commissioner Sudhir concluded his address by expressing hope that the vaccine would help Maldives to save lives, ameliorate the suffering of the Maldivian people and facilitate economic recovery.

Minister of Foreign Affairs Abdulla Shahid and Minister of Health Ahmed Naseem also spoke at the event, expressing gratitude to Prime Minister Modi and Minister of External Affairs Dr Subrahmanyam Jaishankar for the generous donation of COVID-19 vaccines to Maldives.

President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih welcomed the donation from India in a video message broadcast across the nation ahead of the delivery, describing it as a step forward in Maldives' efforts to overcome the COVID-19 pandemic.

The president conveyed gratitude to the Indian government, people and Prime Minister Narendra Modi on behalf of himself and the Maldivian government.

He went on to express hope that all citizens and foreign individuals in Maldives would be immunized for free in the upcoming months.

20/01/21 Mariyam Malsa/Edition

How a 'gentle soul' ended up living in a US airport security zone for three months

After coming to the United States five years ago to complete a master’s degree program, Aditya Singh said goodbye to his friends in California on October 19 and boarded a Chicago-bound flight from Los Angeles to begin his journey home to India.

He never made it. In a troubling series of events that raises security questions at one of the world’s busiest airports, authorities allege Singh lived undetected for nearly three months at O’Hare until this past weekend, when someone finally noticed and alerted police.

On Monday, he remained in the Cook County Jail on charges alleging felony criminal trespass to a restricted area of an airport and misdemeanour theft. He is due in court January 27.

Singh, 36, lived in the secure area with access to terminals, shops and food at O’Hare International Airport until his arrest Saturday after two United Airlines employees asked to see his identification, prosecutors said. He showed them an airport ID badge that an operations manager had reported missing on October 26.

Police said Singh told them that the coronavirus pandemic left him too afraid to fly and so he instead remained in the airport, often relying on the kindness of strangers to buy him food. His arrest made national headlines, with comparisons to the 2004 Tom Hanks movie, The Terminal.

In a statement, the Chicago Department of Aviation said on Monday that there is “no higher priority” than airport safety and security, which is maintained by a “coordinated and multilayered law enforcement network”.

“While this incident remains under investigation, we have been able to determine that this gentleman did not pose a security risk to the airport or to the travelling public,” the statement read. “We will continue to work with our law enforcement partners on a thorough investigation of this matter.”

An airport official told the Tribune it is unclear if Singh stole the badge or found it. After it was reported missing, the badge would have been deactivated, according to the official, who said if Singh attempted to use it to enter a restricted area, his access would be denied and an alarm would trigger.

There is no indication that Singh left the secured side of the airport, the airport official said.

Singh completed a master’s programme at Oklahoma State University and had been living since summer 2019 in Orange, California, southeast of Los Angeles, in the home of Carl Jones, who said he offered Singh a place to live in exchange for helping him care for his elderly father and other odd jobs.

Jones told the Tribune that Singh’s visa was expiring, so he planned in October to return to India, where his mother lives. Jones described Singh as a “very gentle soul” who often volunteered helping the homeless. The two last spoke October 19 when, Jones said, Singh confirmed he had arrived safely in Chicago and was on his way to India.

“I’m kind of flabbergasted,” Jones said when told about Singh’s arrest. “Maybe he got to Chicago and due to some sort of hiccup couldn’t get any farther or just freaked out about having to go back to India, I don’t know. But, as far as I know, he was supposed to be just laying over and going to India.”

The two met through Mary Steele, who said she has known Singh since 2018, when she travelled between Oklahoma and California for various religious and political activism events. Singh, whom she described as deeply spiritual, had another year left after graduation before his visa expired and wanted to “go west,” and so she connected him with Jones.

Steele also lived in Jones’ house, but she said she last saw Singh in August because she was travelling. The two spoke on the phone and texted several times since October, and Steele said she did not believe her friend when he told her in late November that he was living in the airport as part of a spiritual awakening of sorts.

“I believed him the first couple weeks after I found out, but then I was thinking to myself it’s just not possible with all the security that he was in that airport that long,” she said.

Steele shared a series of texts with the Tribune that she said were exchanged between her and Singh as she repeatedly offered him support to return to California. He even snapped a couple of photos that he sent her, including one of himself wearing a face mask and one of passengers sitting in a United Airlines terminal.

On December 1, he wrote: “I need to complete my karmic lessons that I’m learning here. Then I’ll be able to go back home to India.” Singh said he enjoyed speaking to other people in the airport, sharing his Buddhist and Hindu beliefs on healing and trying to help improve their lives, according to Steele.

Shortly before his arrest, she said, Singh told her he planned to return to California with the goal of getting to India. The two discussed bus fare prices, and Steele offered to help. In a January 3 response, Singh texted: “I’m actually growing spiritually due to this experience and I know I will come out stronger.”

Singh does not have a criminal record, authorities said. It is unclear if he actually had a plane ticket to India after reaching O’Hare, but Steele said he told her his plan was to call his mother after arriving in Chicago, and that she would arrange for his continued journey back home.

20/01/21 Christy Gutowski/Chicago Tribune/Stuff

Monday, January 18, 2021

Air cargo rising, but UK flight ban hits exports

Panaji: Cargo movement at Goa International Airport continued to show a steady rise in December with the airport handling 576 tonnes of freight. Domestic cargo in December stood at 509 tonne, while international freight stood at 67 tonne.

Exports to England stopped once the Centre banned flights to the UK during mid-December because of a new Covid-19 strain.

Goa used to export perishable items such as fruits and vegetables to the UK on Goa London weekly flights, according to information shared by the Airports Authority of India (AAI). Domestic cargo included electrical machinery and pharmaceuticals.

CONCOR stopped handling cargo operations in March 2020 and the responsibility for import and export of cargo through Goa International Airport is being handled by AAI’s subsidiary, AAI Cargo Logistics and Allied Services (AAICLAS).

“Regardless of the prevailing Covid 19 situation, AAI’s Goa airport handled 162 tonnes of freight in July 2020, while the highest in December is 576 tonnes. With the dedication of AAI staff, Goa Airport aims to continue to keep on delivering,” said AAI in a tweet.

Goa airport director Gagan Malik said that for domestic cargo operations, the major destinations are Delhi, Bengaluru, Mumbai, Kolkata and Chennai.

“The commodities are engineering goods, machinery parts, electrical goods and pharmaceuticals,” Malik said.

Goan exporters, particularly from the pharmaceutical sector and manufacturing sector, say that the lack of regular cargo flights to international destinations forces companies to export via Mumbai, Bengaluru and other major hubs.

18/01/21 Times of India

Indian-American arrested for living in Chicago airport for 3 months due to fear of Covid

Los Angeles: A 36-year-old Indian-origin man who was too scared to fly due to the coronavirus pandemic and lived undetected for nearly three months in a secure area of Chicago's international airport has been arrested, US authorities said.

Aditya Singh lives in a suburb of Los Angeles, California, was arrested on Saturday for living in a secure area at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport since October 19, the Chicago Tribune reported on Sunday.

Singh has been charged with felony criminal trespass to a restricted area of an airport and misdemeanour theft, the report said.

Prosecutors told a court that Singh arrived at O'Hare on a flight from Los Angeles on October 19 and allegedly has lived in the airport's security zone ever since, without detection.

Singh was arrested after two United Airlines staff asked him to produce his identification. He showed them a badge, but it reportedly belonged to an operations manager who reported it missing in October.

He reportedly found the staff badge in the airport and was "scared to go home due to Covid", Assistant State Attorney Kathleen Hagerty said.

The airline employees called 911. Police took Singh into custody on Saturday morning in Terminal 2 near Gate F12.

Singh managed to live on handouts from other passengers, Hagerty told Cook County Judge Susana Ortiz.

The judge expressed surprise at the circumstances of the case, the report said.

“So if I understand you correctly, you're telling me that an unauthorised, non-employee individual was allegedly living within a secure part of the O'Hare airport terminal from Oct. 19, 2020, to Jan. 16, 2021, and was not detected? I want to understand you correctly,” Ortiz said.

Singh lives in the Los Angeles suburb of Orange with roommates and does not have a criminal background, according to Assistant Public Defender Courtney Smallwood. She said Singh has a master's degree in hospitality and is unemployed.

Smallwood acknowledged the circumstances were unusual but noted the allegations were non-violent.

It was unclear what brought Singh to Chicago, the report said.

Singh has been barred from entering the airport if he is able to post the USD 1,000 for bail. He is due back in court on January 27.

“The court finds these facts and circumstances quite shocking for the alleged period of time that this occurred,” the judge said.

18/01/21 PTI/Times of India

13 Airlines affected in JKIA terminal changes

The Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) has migrated flight operations affecting 13 Airlines at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport.

The changes have been effected by a 12-month renovation exercise at the Airport affecting Terminals 1B and 1C.

“JKIA's TERMINAL 1B and TERMINAL 1C closed to pave way for renovation works to upgrade the airport and improve on passenger experience,” said KAA in a press statement.

All flight operations previously in T1B and T1C have been migrated to Terminal 1A and Terminal 2.

The airlines affected include Lufthansa German Airlines, Qatar Airways, Ethiopian Airlines, RwandAir, Air Mozambique, Air Arabia, Turkish Airlines, Egypt Air, Air India, Uganda Airlines, British Airways, Emirates and UNHAS.

The renovation has been estimated to cost Sh963 million.

KAA has urged passengers to check their flight status with their respective airline to avert inconvenience.

18/01/21 Sara Okuoro/Standard

Air Tanzania and Air India sign cooperation agreement

Dar es Salaam: Air Tanzania Company Limited (ATCL) and Air India have  on Monday, January 18, announced an interline agreement which is meant increase connectivity for  customers of both airlines.

The national carrier's managing director Ladislaus Matindi said under the pact, both companies will be selling tickets jointly for flights between their route networks, allowing customers to travel with one ticket, check in once and check bags through their final destination.

He explained that customers on Air Tanzania’s route into India can enjoy access to the largest portfolio of destinations on Air India domestic network in India and beyond with access to more than 100 destinations via Mumbai.

"This agreement with Air India is very important in strengthening our international presence especially presenting Air India service to our clients who want to explore India as well as the far East countries," said Mr Matindi.

18/01/21 Alex Nelson Malanga/Citizen


Sunday, January 17, 2021

SpiceJet adds five destinations to India from UAE’s Ras Al Khaimah Airport

Indian carrier SpiceJet has expanded its operations from Ras Al Khaimah International Airport (RAK Airport) to five more cities including Mumbai, Cochin, Amritsar, Lucknow and Jaipur, besides increasing frequencies to its existing Delhi-Ras Al Khaimah-Delhi route.

The addition of the new destinations comes less than two months after the low-cost carrier began operations to RAK Airport.

By way of a partnership between SpiceJet and RAK Airport, free road transportation (passenger pick-up and drop-off) is provided to passengers in Abu Dhabi, Dubai and Sharjah.

Ras Al Khaimah aims to attract 2.9 million visitors per year by 2025 and tourism is one of its central elements in its economic diversification strategy.

“SpiceJet has been a vital partner for us since we signed an MoU with them in 2019 and they are playing a major role in our expansion plans, which are to deliver more services to a greater number of destinations across the Indian sub-continent as well as to the rest of the world. This new tranche of services from SpiceJet will further enhance our role as a vital transport hub for the UAE,” said Sanjay Khanna, CEO of Ras Al Khaimah International Airport.

“We are working hard to attract more airlines to our facility and expect our operations to grow significantly this year for the anticipated post-Covid-19 economic bounce and Expo 2020 in October,” added Khanna.

Ajay Singh, CMD SpiceJet, meanwhile said, “SpiceJet has flown with the highest occupancy of over 90% in India for a record five years now, which is a testament to our continued popularity. The addition of our new flights to Ras Al Khaimah will both meet existing requirements for flights to and from the UAE and India as well as help fuel new demand.”

17/01/21 Varun Godinho/Gulf News


Saturday, January 16, 2021

Wide-bodied aircraft of Saudi Air to land in Kozhikode on February 1

Karipur: The big aircraft of Saudi Air from Riyadh was granted permission to land in Kozhikode airport. The SV-3889 flight will set out from Riyadh on February 1 at 1.45 am.

 The wide-bodied aircraft belongs to Code E category. The flight that flies from Riyadh will land at Karipur International Airport on February 1 morning. 

 The service of large aircrafts was stopped in Karipur airport after the Air India Express plane crash occurred in August 2020. As Saudi Air flight is permitted to land in Kozhikode, wide-bodied flights of other companies also will get permission soon. 

 16/01/21 Mathrubhumi


Friday, January 15, 2021

Covid negative report must for flying to US from January 26

New Delhi: Flying to the US from January 26 will require a Covid negative result from a test taken within three days of departure to there or a document of recovery.

The American Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has issued new rules to prevent the spread of the more infectious strains of the virus that have emerged in several parts of the world now. The UK will also require negative test reports from anyone flying in there from Friday (January 15).

The US CDC in a media statement this Tuesday (January 12) said “airlines must confirm the negative test result for all passengers or documentation of recovery before they board. If a passenger does not provide documentation of a negative test or recovery, or chooses not to take a test, the airline must deny boarding to the passenger.”

The United website says: “Beginning January 26, the CDC will require all travellers flying to or transiting through the US from international destinations, including US citizens, to provide proof of either a negative Covid-19 test or documentation of recovery…. The test (must) be taken within the 3 calendar days prior to departure… Documentation of recovery must include proof of a positive test result and a letter from a licensed health care provider or public health official clearing them for travel… This does not apply to children under two,” United website says.

With new and more infectious strains of Coronavirus emerging in various countries, the US — already witnessing a surge in cases — has taken this step to “help slow the spread of the virus as we work to vaccinate the American public,” says CDC.

“Before departure to the United States, a required test, combined with the CDC recommendations to get tested again 3-5 days after arrival and stay home for 7 days post-travel, will help slow the spread of COVID-19 within US communities from travel-related infections. Pre-departure testing with results known and acted upon before travel begins will help identify infected travellers before they board airplanes,” CDC says.

The UK will also require negative test reports from anyone flying in there from Friday (January 15). The test must be taken within 72 hours of departure for the UK. Those going from certain countries will be required to self-isolate themselves for 10 days on arrival even if they do not have the infection. Failure to comply with the rules will lead to a fine of £500, the UK government decided on Tuesday.

15/01/21 Saurabh Sinha/Times of India

Air India launches direct non-stop Chicago-Hyderabad service

Hyderabad: Air India has introduced the first-ever non-stop services between Hyderabad and Chicago.

Coming close on the heels of the launch of the non-stop Bengaluru-San Francisco service, this flight is set to fulfil a long-standing demand for a direct air-link between the two major cities.

Flight AI 108 from Chicago to Hyderabad will operate on Wednesdays. The first flight left Chicago on time at 2130 hrs on January 13, and will arrive at Hyderabad at 0040 hrs (LT) on January 15. The return flight AI-107 from Hyderabad to Chicago which operates once a week every Friday, will depart from Hyderabad at 1250 hrs to arrive in Chicago at 1805 hrs (LT) on the same day.

The flight will operate with a Boeing 777-200LR aircraft with a seating capacity of 238 seats including eight First Class, 35 Business Class, and 195 Economy class configuration, besides four Cockpit and 12 Cabin crew, according to an AI statement.

The total flight time on this route will be approximately 16 hours 45 minutes from Hyderabad to Chicago and approx 15 hours 40 minutes from Chicago to Hyderabad.

Hyderabad being a gateway to South and Central India, will connect Air India’s direct flight from Chicago with domestic connections to Visakhapatnam, Vijayawada, Bengaluru and Chennai.

With Air India being a Star Alliance member, passengers will enjoy seamless connectivity to other interline destinations facilitating faster and smoother accessibility to cities in neighbouring states via short domestic flights.

At present, Air India operates non-stop flights from Delhi to New York, Newark, Washington DC, San Francisco and Chicago, from Mumbai to Newark and New York and the recently added service from Bengaluru to San Francisco.

15/01/21 Business Line


Air India launches direct non-stop Chicago-Hyderabad service

 Hyderabad: Air India has introduced the first-ever non-stop services between Hyderabad and Chicago.

Coming close on the heels of the launch of the non-stop Bengaluru-San Francisco service, this flight is set to fulfil a long-standing demand for a direct air-link between the two major cities.

Flight AI 108 from Chicago to Hyderabad will operate on Wednesdays. The first flight left Chicago on time at 2130 hrs on January 13, and will arrive at Hyderabad at 0040 hrs (LT) on January 15. The return flight AI-107 from Hyderabad to Chicago which operates once a week every Friday, will depart from Hyderabad at 1250 hrs to arrive in Chicago at 1805 hrs (LT) on the same day.

The flight will operate with a Boeing 777-200LR aircraft with a seating capacity of 238 seats including eight First Class, 35 Business Class, and 195 Economy class configuration, besides four Cockpit and 12 Cabin crew, according to an AI statement.

The total flight time on this route will be approximately 16 hours 45 minutes from Hyderabad to Chicago and approx 15 hours 40 minutes from Chicago to Hyderabad.

Hyderabad being a gateway to South and Central India, will connect Air India’s direct flight from Chicago with domestic connections to Visakhapatnam, Vijayawada, Bengaluru and Chennai.

With Air India being a Star Alliance member, passengers will enjoy seamless connectivity to other interline destinations facilitating faster and smoother accessibility to cities in neighbouring states via short domestic flights.

At present, Air India operates non-stop flights from Delhi to New York, Newark, Washington DC, San Francisco and Chicago, from Mumbai to Newark and New York and the recently added service from Bengaluru to San Francisco.

15/01/21 Business Lin

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

SpiceJet ties-up with Brussels Airport for transporting Covid-19 vaccine between India & Europe

New Delhi: SpiceJet has tied up with Brussels Airport for seamless transportation of Covid-19 vaccine. The two will jointly work with the government, pharma companies and forwarders to “ensure a reliable ecosystem for vaccine delivery in a temperature-controlled environment (and) also work towards developing and strengthening a direct air link for SpiceJet with Brussels Airport,” the airline said in a statement.

Brussels Airport will be SpiceJet’s first flight point for Europe. The airline’s cargo arm, SpiceXpress, plans to transport Covid-19 vaccine from and to Europe and beyond with proper temperature-controlled mechanism under the MoU.

SpiceJet CMD Ajay Singh said: “This tie-up will help SpiceJet to seamlessly transport vaccines not only from Europe and beyond to India but also help Indian manufacturers export extremely sensitive drugs in a safe and controlled environment. We are fully committed and prepared to transport the Covid vaccine and assist in the biggest vaccination drive in the history of mankind.”

Brussels Airport Company CEO Arnaud Feist said: “As Europe’s preferred airport for the transport of temperature-sensitive products, Brussels Airport, certified IATA CEIV Pharma, has more than 30,000m² of temperature-controlled areas. As from today, we have already shipped more than 10 million doses of vaccine from our Brucargo platform to destinations around the world. In this context, we are very pleased to be partnering with SpiceJet and to be able to offer our expertise for the future distribution of vaccines from India within Europe and beyond. Together, we will make our contribution to the solution to this global health crisis.”

SpiceJet has partnered with other stakeholders like GMR Hyderabad Air Cargo, Om Logistics Ltd and Snowman Logistics for transporting Covid-19 vaccine to every part of the country as well as outside India.

12/01/21 Saurabh Sinha/Times of India

Air India becomes 19th airline in world to fly plane over North pole

Bengaluru: It was only once in August 2019 that an aircraft by an Indian Airline flew over the North Pole. That was a validation flight by Air India aimed at proving to various regulators its prowess to fly over the the northernmost point on the planet. That solo effort has resulted in India getting clearance to fly over this icy, inhospitable region.

Air India on Sunday become the 19th airline in the world to fly its plane over the North Pole. Flight no AI-176, steered by all-women cockpit crew achieved this historic feat. Guiding them every second was Air India's  Executive Director of Flight Safety, Capt. Nivedita Bhasin. Bhasin already has her name etched in Indian aviation's history books. When she was just 26 years, became the youngest women pilot in the world to fly a Boeing 737. She also flew the Second Dreamliner flight from Charleston in the US to India.

Sharing her time on the flight, the Captain said, "It was the first Polar flight and also the longest, for Air India, and so I was brought in to monitor all safety related aspects. I travelled as an observer, and carried our spot checks in the cabin and on the ground in San Francisco. During the flight, I kept checking if everything was going on smooth and as per plan. “ she told The New Indian Express. 

Work on the project began in 2016.  "Flying over the North Pole was possible due to years of preparation, by our Training, Operations and Flight Safety department. “ she said. 

So how was the experience? "An exhilarating experience, to say the least. Ït was actually pitch dark and we could see nothing except a few Northern Lights far away. The sky was clear and the stars were shining, "she recalls 

Explaining the challenges of flying in the North Pole, Capt. Bhasin said, "The polar region is very remote, inhospitable and always under ice cover. The crucial part is the inflight diversion, if any, followed by expeditious retrieval of passengers and crew."

A vital element for any trip to the Polar Region which is 10,000 kms away from the equator is that the levels of radiation present there needs to be continuously monitored. "Since radiation is harmful to health, it is imperative to ensure that it is at a minimum. In case, the radiation levels are high, there is an option of rerouting the flight by avoiding the Polar part. This decision can be taken by the Operations team up to 90 mins before the flight departure time," she explained.

To minimise risk to its crew, Air India has a limit on such flights and each crew member can travel on a North Pole flight only twice in a month, the Executive Director added. "We have made it today because of rigorous training, safety risk assessment and mitigation efforts. By routing through the North Pole, we cut fuel costs as well as time. Reduction of one hour of travel time saves more than 7 tonnes of fuel  and reduces Carbon emissions," she added.

The superior make of aircraft over the years too has made such a feat possible. "Planes are now twin-engined as compared to four in the past. Over time, the reliability of engines has improved and there are remote chances of an inflight engine shutdown," Captain Bhasin said.

12/01/21 S Lalitha/New Indian Express