Hindustan Times (Patiala)

SC allows middle seating in relief flights till June 6

- Murali Krishnan letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEWDELHI: Air India may operate non-scheduled relief and rescue flights on internatio­nal routes with middle seats occupied until June 6, the Supreme Court ordered on Monday, partly modifying a May 22 Bombay high court order that ordered the national airline to keep middle seats vacant while flying in passengers stranded abroad by the coronaviru­s crisis and the suspension of most internatio­nal flights.

AIR INDIA AND THE UNION GOVERNMENT APPROACHED THE SUPREME COURT ON SUNDAY, SEEKING A STAY ON THE BOMBAY HIGH COURT ORDER

NEWDELHI: Air India may operate non-scheduled relief and rescue flights on internatio­nal routes with middle seats occupied until June 6, the Supreme Court ordered on Monday, partly modifying a May 22 Bombay high court order that ordered the national airline to keep middle seats vacant while flying in passengers stranded abroad by the coronaviru­s crisis and the suspension of most internatio­nal flights.

A bench headed by Chief Justice of India SA Bobde allowed Air India to fill up middle seats of the rescue flights for 10 more days, after taking into account difficulti­es that passengers, including families, could face in the event middle-seat passengers are offloaded in foreign airports on grounds of social distancing.

The SC remanded the matter back to the Bombay HC to pass an appropriat­e interim order on June 2, the next date of hearing of the case. Air India will have to comply with the interim order of the HC while operating nonschedul­ed flights after June 6.

“You should be worried about the health of citizens and not about health of commercial airlines,” CJI Bobde told solicitor general Tushar Mehta, who was appearing for Air India and the central government.

During the hearing on Monday, the Supreme Court bench, which also comprised justices AS Bopanna and Hrishikesh Roy, remarked: “There shouldn’t be a difference (between internatio­nal and domestic flights). It is common sense that maintainin­g social distancing is important.”

However, the Bombay high court specifical­ly said that its order was applicable only to nonschedul­ed internatio­nal flights, in light of the fact (as pointed out by the petitioner in that case) that some of the evacuees were coming from countries ravaged by Covid-19 and could be infected.

“We are of the considered view that the petitioner, Air India, should be allowed to operate the non-scheduled flights with the middle seats booking up to 6th June, 2020,” the Supreme Court said on Monday. “However, after that (June 6) Air India will operate non-scheduled flights in accordance with the interim order to be passed by the Bombay high court”, the top court said.

The apex court was critical of Air India’s logic in seeking to operate internatio­nal flights without keeping the middle seats vacant. It also said that the Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation is free to alter any norms during the pendency of the matter in the interest of public health and safety of the passengers rather than commercial considerat­ions.

The petitioner before the high court, Deven Yogesh Kanani, who is an Air India pilot, pointed out that operating flights without keeping middle seats vacant was in violation of the circular issued by the DGCA on March 23.

Air India took the stance that the circular of March 23 applied only to scheduled domestic flights and not non-scheduled internatio­nal flights.

Air India and the Union government approached the

Supreme Court on Sunday, seeking a stay on the order.

Solicitor general Mehta emphasised the difficulti­es that passengers may face if the middle seat bookings are cancelled.

“According to Mr. Mehta, this [Bombay high court order] has resulted in a lot of anxiety and difficulti­es arising from want of proper shelter, money, etc., at the foreign airports...”, the SC noted.

On May 7, India launched the Vande Bharat mission to bring back Indians stranded overseas since the last week of March. Since then, over 400 flights have been organised from 98 countries, to rescue 259,000 Indians.

Senior advocate Sanjay Hegde said: “The order would not possibly have been passed but for the tickets already having been sold... Accepting a fait accompli from the government for tickets sold for one or two days is understand­able. Once a concession is permitted by the court for over ten days, it appears quite likely that the government will give itself a fresh extension, by new administra­tive orders. Meanwhile, those who will have flown in the interim period, may be exposed to unacceptab­le levels of risk.”

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