Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

AI pilot caught drunk before take-off, faces three-yr suspension

- Faizan Haidar faizan.haider@hindustant­imes.com ■

THE LEVEL OF BLOOD ALCOHOL COMPATIBLE (BAC) WITH SAFE FLYING IS ‘ZERO’. THE AIR INDIA PILOT HAD 007% BAC.

NEWDELHI: An Air India pilot was grounded minutes before he was to fly over 200 passengers from New Delhi to London on Sunday afternoon because his mandatory pre-flight medical tests showed he was too drunk to commandeer the aircraft.

A second-time offender who was booked in August for a similar offence, 56-year-old Arvind Kathpalia faces licence suspension for three years.

Airline officials familiar with the matter said the Londonboun­d AI 111, scheduled to depart at 2:45 pm, was delayed after its captain, Kathpalia, who is also the director of Air India’s flight operations, was found with more alcohol in his bloodstrea­m than the permissibl­e limit.

As per the recommenda­tions of the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on, the level of blood alcohol compatible (BAC) with safe flying is ‘zero’. Kathpalia was declared unfit to fly as he had 007% BAC. The airline got the test results at 1:30 pm, a little over an hour before departure, and had to scramble to get another pilot to fly the Boeing 787 that goes non-stop to London’s Heathrow Internatio­nal airport.

Meanwhile, another Air India flight, AI 332, from New Delhi to Bangkok was forced to turn back less than half an hour after departure because the airline staff realised that the one of its pilots skipped his mandatory medical tests, which includes the breatheana­lyser test, according to a senior official who asked not to be named. The ground staff realised that its pilot had boarded the plane without being tested. Air Traffic Control asked the flight to turn back. About 200 passengers booked on the flight took off as the crew’s maximum flying hours lapsed and an alternativ­e crew couldn’t be arranged.

“I had a connecting flight which I am going to miss for sure. The airline is not bothering to inform us when will we fly... This is pure harassment,” said a passenger requesting anonymity.

Air India officials declined to reveal the identity of the pilot, and it was unclear whether his blood alcohol level and other mandatory medical parameters were within prescribed range.

On January 19 last year, Kathpalia commandeer­ed the Delhi-Bengaluru flight AI 174 without going through the mandatory breathalys­er test. He did not take the test after landing at Bengaluru either despite being reminded about it, according to the complaint filed by the Indian Commercial Pilots’ Associatio­n.

An FIR was lodged against Kathpalia on August 24 after the pilots’ union alleged that the episode involved forgery, intimidati­on of a doctor, and violations of aviation rules.

Three official spokespers­ons of Air India and its chairman and managing director Pradeep Singh Kharola did not respond to repeated calls and text messages.

The civil aviation ministry, however, tweeted, “HMCA @sureshppra­bhu has viewed this incident... and already directed earlier that there will be zero tolerance on safety thus now has asked #DGCA to take action as per rules immediatel­y, they are awaiting report from Air India, action will be taken ASAP.”

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