The Sunday Guardian

Drunk pilots put passengers’ lives at risk, regularly

- DIBYENDU MONDAL NEW DELHI

Over 150 pilots belonging to different airlines in India were caught drunk on duty in the past four years, putting the lives of thousands of airline passengers in danger. This informatio­n was revealed in an RTI reply to The Sunday Guardian by the Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), the aviation watchdog.

The RTI reply further said that, this year, 41 pilots tested breathalyz­er-positive for consumptio­n of alcohol when they reported for duty. In 2016, 46 pilots were tested to be under the influence of alcohol when they were on duty. In 2014 and 2015, 26 and 43 pilots respective­ly tested positive for alcohol consumptio­n.

Aviation security experts have raised great concern over the large number of pi- lots reporting to work in an inebriated state every year, despite DGCA’s provisions to check drunk flying.

The DGCA has, however, refused to provide details of the pilots and the airlines that defaulted the most. According to informatio­n provided by the Ministry of Civil Aviation to the Lok Sabha last year, Jet Airways and low cost carrier Indigo registered the highest number of pilots drunk on duty.

Between 2014 and April 2016, Indigo saw 20 of their pilots drunk on duty, while Jet Airways, along with its low cost carrier Jet Lite, saw 23 drunk pilots reporting for duty. Air India saw 17 pilots drunk, while SpiceJet 15 during the same period.

Jitender Bhargava, former Executive Director of Air India, told The Sunday Guardian, “Reports of pilots reporting for duty drunk still prevail because of the lack of effective implementa­tion of the DGCA rules by the airlines. The airlines need to conduct a medical test of all their pilots before they are allowed to fly, but what the airlines sometimes do is that they give a leeway to the pilots who they think are moderately drunk, putting at risk the lives of thousands of air travellers. Air safety should not be compromise­d at any cost.”

He further added that instead of giving warning through suspension­s, the DGCA should terminate the flying licences of pilots flying under the influence of alcohol the very first time, so that this acts as a deterrent for erring pilots.

Also, according to highly placed sources within the DGCA, the pilots and the airlines, with the connivance of the doctors on duty, give away fitness certificat­es to pilots despite some of these pilots being under the “moderate” influence of alcohol. “We have noticed such cases several times in the past as well. The DGCA conducts surprise checks at all airports to ensure safety and security and that is how the numbers of drunk pilots have come up,” a source told this newspaper.

Presently, the DGCA suspends the licences of erring pilots for three months for a

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