Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Two more airlines ban comedian Kamra

- Sunetra Choudhury and Harinder Baweja letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: SpiceJet and GoAir announced on Wednesday that they have banned stand-up comedian Kunal Kamra from using their services, a day after he posted a video of him heckling television show anchor Arnab Goswami on board a Mumbai-Lucknow IndiGo flight – an incident that prompted the interventi­on of aviation minister Hardeep Singh Puri.

Within hours of the video being posted, IndiGo on Tuesday said he will not be allowed to fly on the airline for six months. Air India followed suit, banning Kamra “till further notice”.

Puri said he felt compelled to sidestep laid down procedures because he wanted “zero tolerance for aberrant behaviour”.

“This was not a normal case. It left me with no choice. It could have led to a scuffle on board and endangered security. It doesn’t matter whether it is Arnab or

XYZ; a zero tolerance [policy] will apply universall­y and will be ideology and politics neutral. The message had to go out that such behaviour is unacceptab­le,” the minister told HT.

Kamra on Tuesday posted a video in which he is heard talking to Goswami, in a style that he claimed was mimicking the news anchor’s. Kamra is heard constantly referring to the Republic TV founder as a “coward” and attacks his coverage of the 2015 suicide of Hyderabad Central University student Rohith Vemula.

Shortly afterwards, IndiGo Airlines announced in a tweet that it will put Karma on a no-fly list for six months. While quoting

IndiGo’s tweet, minister Puri wrote, “Offensive behaviour designed to provoke and create disturbanc­e inside an aircraft is absolutely unacceptab­le and endangers safety of air travellers. We are left with no option but to advise other airlines to impose similar restrictio­ns on the person concerned”.

The move by the four airlines has been criticised as a case of overreach. According to the Civil Aviation Requiremen­ts (CAR) notice published by regulator Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), such cases must be raised through a complaint by the pilot-in-command which is then passed on to a committee. According to the rules, other airlines are not obliged to ban passengers blocked by one carrier.

Such action, which can be classified as a ‘level 1’ offence, can attract a maximum ban of three months. Kamra can challenge the bans in an appeal to DGCA. “In this case, the man who has taken the offensive clip, has brought it into the public domain. He is using the four-letter word, there is a threatenin­g tone in that. If the other passenger hadn’t shown restraint, there would have been scuffle on the plane,” said Puri.”

The minister said Kamra’s case was not comparable with that of MP Pragya Thakur, who held up a flight last month after an altercatio­n with fellow passengers. “That was about seat allocation. She was not being offensive. The other passenger was being offensive. If the passenger had filed a complaint with the DGCA, the aviation body would have examined it.”

Kamra did not respond to requests for a comment. In new tweets, he defended his actions and said he did not jeopardise passenger safety or disobey flight crew.

Congress president Rahul Gandhi attacked the government as well as Goswami over the issue. “Those who use their “news” cameras as 24x7 tools of propaganda should show some spine when the camera is turned on them,” he tweeted.

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Kunal Kamra
■ Kunal Kamra

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