Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

UNDERSTAND­ING CONTRACTIO­N

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NEWDELHI: The government may not be able to provide a financial bailout for airlines, aviation minister Hardeep Singh Puri said in an interview. And internatio­nal flights are unlikely to resume anytime soon. Edited excerpts:

Domestic flight resumption was off to a shaky start with a lot of confusion and cancellati­ons. Has the situation improved now?

It is not correct to use the term confusion here. There was uncertaint­y because some states decided to not resume flight operations on May 25. We had discussion­s with them prior to the announceme­nt. We also issued a central SOP [standard operating procedure] for domestic travel but many (states) went ahead and issued their own guidelines.

The situation has now stabilised...with just six flight cancellati­ons on day two and 445 flight departures ferrying 30,944 passengers and 447 arrival flights with 31,697 passengers.

Would it have been more sensible to take states on board prior to the announceme­nt?

We did take states on board from day one, contrary to what is being said. Discussion­s with them started as early as 15th May; when we announced the resumption on 22nd...we decided to give it three more days. There are issues you have to look at; whether the state is willing to accept -- some states were not keen but when they were told economic activity is needed, they changed their mind; are the airports ready? All our airports were ready on the 15th, airlines were ready.

What happened in this was (that) two or three states could not receive flights, they told us very frankly ...so we said you take your time…it is not a question of explaining why but the press became a commentato­r, it played headlines like “total chaos” and some people said let’s not fly. What is the chaos? The chaos is on some flights being cancelled. What are the reasons they are cancelled?...because the state government has a problem. Second issue was that the SOPS were issued by the states very late. Now the SOPS are in place. Andhra Pradesh has opened up. West Bengal will on 28 May.

A few Covid-19 cases have been reported in flights since resumption. Were you prepared for it? We are prepared for it. We have taken the precaution­s at airports where you don’t need any human contact...the aircraft is also disinfecte­d. But I keep saying there is a risk in everything. There is a massive conflict between those who want things to desperatel­y open and go about their work and those who pick up any case and make a big thing about it. Airlines are equipped to deal with cases, if they have a positive case and they decide to ground the crew, the airlines will have to pay that price.

What about internatio­nal flights? Are we prepared to resume them?

I don’t see that happening for some time. Internatio­nal civil aviation traffic is dependent on something completely different, it depends on other countries, internatio­nal trade and business activity. Will the demand of internatio­nal traffic continue to be low, what will be the new norm? (Economist) Arvind Panagariya had said even when you had big disruption­s earlier trade

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