Gulf News

India domestic flights take off amid chaos

Airlines scrap dozens of flights, hundreds of passengers cancel their bookings

-

Domestic flights resumed in India yesterday even as coronaviru­s cases surge, while confusion about quarantine rules prompted jitters among passengers and the cancellati­on of dozens of planes.

India had halted all flights within the country, and departing and leaving for abroad, in late March as it sought to stop the spread of coronaviru­s with the world’s largest lockdown.

But desperate to get Asia’s third-largest economy moving again, the government announced last week that around 1,050 daily flights — a third of the usual capacity — would resume.

Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said strict rules would include mandatory mask-wearing and thermal screenings, although middle seats on the aircraft would not be kept empty.

Caught off-guard

The announceme­nt reportedly caught airlines and state authoritie­s off-guard, with several local government­s announcing that passengers would have to go into quarantine for two weeks on arrival.

Maharashtr­a, the state with the highest number of coronaviru­s cases, capped at 50 the number of departures and arrivals in and out of its capital Mumbai.

Airlines scrapped dozens of flights yesterday while hundreds

Anything can happen. It’s very risky. I don’t really know when I’ll be able to come back to Delhi now. There is no clarity from the university too at this time.”

Gladia Laipubam | Student

of passengers cancelled their bookings, reports said.

The NDTV news channel said 82 flights to and from New Delhi had been cancelled and nine at Bengaluru airport.

Other flights from cities including infection hotspots Mumbai and Chennai were struck off, many at short notice, reports said.

At Mumbai airport social distancing was forgotten as irate passengers harangued staff after their flights were cancelled at the last minute.

At New Delhi airport, hundreds of people anxious to get home but apprehensi­ve about the risks queued from before dawn — all wearing masks and standing at least one metre apart.

Security personnel behind plastic screens verified checkin documents and that passengers had the government contact tracing app, Aarogya Setu, on their phones.

“While I’m looking forward [to flying home], the idea of flying is really scary,” student Gladia Laipubam said.

“Anything can happen. It’s very risky. I don’t really know when I’ll be able to come back to Delhi now. There is no clarity from the university too at this time.”

One female airline employee wearing gloves, a mask and a protective face shield said she and many other colleagues felt “very nervous” about starting work again.

 ??  ??
 ?? PTI ?? Passengers stand in a queue to board an Indigo plane for domestic travel at Chennai airport yesterday.
PTI Passengers stand in a queue to board an Indigo plane for domestic travel at Chennai airport yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates