Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Fliers survived 32 nearmisses last yr

2016 also saw the suspension of 151 pilots

- n jeevan.sharma@htlive.com Jeevan Prakash Sharma

On August 22 last year, an air traffic controller saw Indigo flight IGO258 and Air India’s AIC995 approachin­g the same altitude over Delhi. Flight AIC995 was asked to turn left to avoid a collision, but that put the plane on the path of another Indigo aircraft, IGO528.

It was a close shave, and in the end the three flights landed safely after the AI plane again changed its altitude, a source at the civil aviation ministry told HT.

The incident was among 32 cases of ‘near miss’ in 2016, highest for any year in the history of the country’s civil aviation, according to government data obtained by HT through the Right to Informatio­n law. The year beat the previous maximum seen in 2013 by 40%.

Experts say that recent initiative­s to boost the aviation sector will only weaken air safety standards, beset at present by a shortage of manpower, training and airspace for civilian traffic.

“While safety requires maximum separation, increasing traffic has brought aircraft closer to each other’s boundaries, so the chances of transgress­ion are high,” said SS Singh, a retired executive director of air traffic monitoring.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi flagged off last week a scheme to make flying cheaper, aiming to put air travel in reach for the middle class with more flights to smaller towns.

The year also saw the highest number — 151 — of pilots being suspended for violating safety protocols, a 38% increase from the previous high of 109 suspension­s in 2012.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India