Saturday, January 23, 2016

Raju questions 5/20 rule

New Delhi: Union Civil Aviation Minister Ashok Gajapathi Raju said on Friday the current rules for allowing airlines to fly abroad on the basis of five years of experience and 20 aircrafts in their fleet had no “scientific meaning.”

“This (5/20 rule) is obviously something that is pulling Indians down…Does it have any scientific meaning?” Mr. Raju told reporters at the sidelines of an aviation conference here. The minister denied allegations of the incumbent private airlines that ownership and effective control norms were being flouted by foreign partners of Indian carriers. According to the ‘5/20 rule,’ all airlines in India need five years of domestic flying experience and at least 20 aircrafts in its fleet in order to fly abroad. The rule has been a subject of heated debate between domestic airline operators.

While the private airlines which are allowed to fly abroad — IndiGo, Jet Airways, SpiceJet — have all opposed the proposal to abolish the rule, new airlines Vistara and AirAsia India are in strong favour of relaxing the norm. However, the Civil Aviation Ministry is still undecided on whether to keep the 5/20 rule, abolish it or replace it with some other regulation in the civil aviation policy which is yet to go to the Union Cabinet.
23/01/16 The Hindu
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