Millennium Post (Kolkata)

Indian carriers face tough time as employees’ anger grows

A major chunk of IndiGo, Go First technician­s have gone on sick leave in last one week to protest over low salaries

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NEW DELHI: Indian carriers which were looking forward to sunny days with the receding of COVID-19 pandemic have hit serious turbulence, as they are now faced with an issue they left unaddresse­d in the past two years employees’ disaffecti­on over low pay.

A significan­t section of aircraft maintenanc­e technician­s of IndiGo and Go First have gone on sick leave in the last one week to protest against their low salaries. However, despite the staff crunch, both carriers have managed to keep their flight operations unaffected, barring a few embarrassi­ng incidents.

The truancy among the employees of these airlines is also being cited as occasioned by the hiring sprees launched by carriers such as Akasa Air, a revamped Jet Airways, and Tata-owned Air India.

On July 2, around 55 per cent of IndiGo’s domestic flights were delayed as a significan­t number of its cabin crew went on leave, with sources saying they reportedly went for an Air India recruitmen­t drive.

On July 13, some SpiceJet pilots circulated a message that the airline’s captains and first officers will be going on sick leave on Thursday to protest against their low salaries.

However, on the said day, all pilots reported on duty, according to the airline.

Indian carriers, which saw their revenues sapped dry during the global virus attack, had cut down salaries of their employees during the peak of the pandemic to save cash.

Most of them are yet to bring these salaries back to pre-pandemic levels. A senior executive of a low-cost carrier said that employees are not lost on the fact that while their workload at present is as huge as it was before the pandemic, they are getting lower salaries, even as a rising inflation nibbles away at this circumscri­bed income.

This has created a lot of discontent among the employees, especially those who are at the bottom of the hierarchy, he added.

Two technician­s — who took part in this ‘sick leave protest’ — said that the new joinees in the low-cost carriers are paid anywhere between Rs 8,000Rs 15,000 per month, which is extremely less.

While it seems that the issues of low pay have cropped up only now, the revolt reveals a deeper malaise within the aviation industry.

Most of the carriers are yet to bring these salaries back to pre-pandemic levels

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