The Asian Age

AI’s spirit lives, but still a burden

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Air India, the national carrier, is quite the albatross around the government’s neck. Exploiting the airline for travel may, however, have been tuned into a fine art by dignitarie­s, politician­s and bureaucrat­s. There are no intending buyers or strategic investors for the airline, which has run up mountainou­s debt in excess of ` 50,000 crores, but the government seems to treat it as s in- house transporte­r for which no payment is needed.

The latest RTI reply reveals Air India is owed ` 1,146 crores for VIP travel. There are pending payments dating back 12 years: the CAG flagged the issue two years back. The sheer callousnes­s in dealing with a broken wing is evident.

A part of the dues is over evacuation flights, in which Air India has played a praisewort­hy role, drawing the admiration of many countries during the Yemen crisis.

The profession­alism of those who operate AI aircraft is also a source of eternal pride. The pilots of an AI flight on September far exceeded even those standards with a landing at Newark airport that should be part of aviation folklore.

With 370 passengers aboard, all systems malfunctio­ning, the fuel load low after a long flight and visibility less than 100 metres over New York’s JFK Airport in the most dreaded aviation circumstan­ces, the brave pilots chose to fly on to New Jersey for a visual landing. The American ATC official’s words — “I only wish I could do more for you” — may have been ringing in their ears as they landed without any passenger even knowing the odds they had to overcome. Nothing exemplifie­s AI’s spirit better than the brave Dreamliner pilots on Flight AI- 101.

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