Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Drunk Japan Airlines pilot was ‘10 times over alcohol limit’

- Agence Francepres­se

TOKYO: A Japan Airlines pilot who was arrested in Britain shortly before a flight for being drunk was almost 10 times over the legal blood alcohol limit for a pilot, London police said.

The incident came a day after another Japanese carrier apologised for multiple delays after a hungover pilot called in sick.

JAL executives told reporters in Japan that the co-pilot cleared an in-house breath test but aroused the suspicion of a bus driver taking him to the plane at Heathrow Airport on Sunday.

The co-pilot, identified as Katsutoshi Jitsukawa, 42, was arrested by British police and required to undergo a blood test that confirmed those results.

He had reportedly consumed two bottles of wine and more than 1.8 litres (nearly four US pints) of beer over six hours on the night before the flight.

“We are certain (the in-house breath test) wasn’t conducted properly,” JAL communicat­ions chief Muneaki Kitahara told reporters Thursday.

A London police spokesman said a test on the co-pilot taken 50 minutes before the flight’s scheduled departure revealed 189 milligrams of alcohol per 100 millilitre­s of blood in his system -almost 10 times the 20-milligram limit for a pilot. The drink-drive limit in England is 80 milligrams.

The pilot later pleaded guilty before a court to being over the legal limit, and is expected to be sentenced on November 29.

The plane departed London after a delay of 69 minutes. “The company sincerely apologises to the passengers and to all affected by the employee’s actions,” JAL said in a press release.

The incident came just a day after All Nippon Airways revealed a hung-over pilot had caused multiple flight delays.

The male pilot in his 40s called in sick after a night of drinking on the remote resort island of Ishigaki in southern Okinawa prefecture, the company said. The lastminute sickie forced the airline to delay five flights linking Okinawa island and smaller regional islands, affecting 619 passengers.

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