Business Standard

AIRLINES STALL FLYERS WITH FAKE COVID-NEGATIVE REPORTS

- ARINDAM MAJUMDER New Delhi, 26 April More on business-standard.com

The widespread use of fake Covid-19 negative reports by Indians travelling abroad have raised the alarm in the health authoritie­s of other countries, forcing Indian airlines to accept only reports that have a QR code embedded in them.

Some Indian states that also require negative reports before allowing passengers in have also been concerned at this practice. The airlines have responded by asking the government to standardis­e all Covid-19 certificat­es.

Business Standard has learnt that the Ministry of Civil Aviation has written to the Ministry of Health saying that only those RT-PCR certificat­es which have a QR code linking them to their original test report will be considered as authentic by the airlines and airports.

Till now, airlines have been allowing test reports from the 634 labs approved by the Indian Council of Medical Research but the majority of them do not provide certificat­es embedded with a QR code. This makes it difficult for airlines to verify their authentici­ty.

Last week the Delhi government threatened to file FIRS against four airlines — Indigo, Spicejet, Airasia India and Vistara — for not checking the RT-PCR negative reports of passengers flying into the capital from Maharashtr­a.

Earlier this month, the civil aviation authoritie­s of the UAE held a call with airlines operating between India and the UAE. The topic of discussion was the flurry of Indian passengers arriving in the UAE who were testing positive upon arrival at airports despite carrying a negative certificat­e.

“The authoritie­s have shifted the burden of checking certificat­es to airlines, in much the same way as carriers are required to check for proper travel visas before allowing passengers to fly. It is very easy to edit a PDF. With the number of such checking requiremen­ts high, it’s quite impossible for boarding staff to keep a tab on which certificat­e is genuine,” said an executive of a private airline.

The problem showed up starkly when more than a third of the passengers on a Vistara flight to Hong Kong tested positive, despite having a negative certificat­e. The next day, Hong Kong suspended all flights with India.

Almost all airlines are now asking passengers to have the QR code on test reports for destinatio­ns where a RT-PCR test is compulsory.

“The boarding agents are checking the RT-PCR reports with a QR code scanner. We had to deny boarding to some passengers due to this,” said an executive of India’s largest airline, Indigo.

Genestring­s Diagnostic­s Centre, which runs the testing facility at Delhi Airport, is seeing a surge in the number of passengers who have negative certificat­es from leading hospitals without a QR code, says COO Chetan Kohli. And they are coming to get tested at the centre after being denied boarding.

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