New Delhi: A routine probe into a damaged door has ended up piling one embarrassment on top of another for embattled national carrier Air India (AI). The IC 179 Air India flight from Mumbai to Mangalore, which landed in trouble when a DGCA (Directorate General Of Civil Aviation) probe revealed that it was carrying passengers beyond its capacity, had doctored records to show the extra travelers as 'infants', DNA has learnt.
The Airbus A-321 aircraft never took off from Mumbai airport on May 5, 2009 because its door got damaged. According to reports, the aircraft's door got damaged when towing started while the plane was still attached to the aerobridge. As a result, all the passengers were taken to another aircraft. "But the woman pilot of the second aircraft refused to accommodate the extra passengers and this forced the crew and pilot to tamper with the passenger records," said a senior government official.
The DGCA had originally launched a probe only into the door damage incident.
Sources said that the flight records of the damaged aircraft mentioned 173 passengers and six infants. But records in the second aircraft showed 173 adults and three infants. "....During the probe, it emerged that the excess passengers were shown as infants to avoid any suspicion," said the official. Sources said that of the three extra passengers - all women - one was accommodated in the cockpit and two occupied the foldable seats used by cabin crew during take-off and landing.
This gross violation of air safety norms was confirmed by the analysis of the Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR), which established the presence of a woman passenger in the cockpit.Sources said that the extra passengers were family members of airline officials.
12/07/09 Yogesh Kumar/Daily News & Analysis
To Read the News in full at Source, Click the Headline
Sunday, July 12, 2009
Home »
Air India Domestic Jul 2009
,
Airports Jul 2009
,
NACIL Jul 2009
,
Safety Jul 2009
» AI flight recorded adult travelers as infants
AI flight recorded adult travelers as infants
Sunday, July 12, 2009
0 comments:
Post a Comment