Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Seaplane flown back to Maldives for maintenanc­e

- Neha LM Tripathi

MUMBAI: For the second time in three months, the country’s sole seaplane has been flown back to the Maldives for “scheduled maintenanc­e”, following which seaplane operations were suspended from Wednesday.

According to sources in know of the matter, the 19-seater Twin Otter 300 seaplane – property of a Maldivian company – took off from Ahmedabad to land in Goa on Tuesday.

“After staying in Goa overnight, it took-off for Cochin on Wednesday to reach the Maldives by the afternoon,” said an official from the Directorat­e General Civil Aviation (DGCA) on condition of anonymity.

Spicejet spokespers­on confirmed the developmen­t and said, “Seaplane operations will be suspended for three days starting today (Wednesday) as the aircraft is going to the Maldives for scheduled maintenanc­e today. The aircraft will return on February 5 and operations will resume on February 6, 2021. While a facility for dayto-day maintenanc­e has been set up in India, one for larger maintenanc­e is in the work.” The seaplane service between Kevadia and Sabarmati riverfront (Ahmedabad) – was inaugurate­d by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the birth anniversar­y of Sardar Vallabhai Patel on October 31 – to attract tourists to the Statue of Unity. It was then temporaril­y suspended within a month. After re-commencing operations on December 30, 2020, the airline said no flights operated on three days – January 9 due to bad weather, and January

14 and 15 given the kite flying festival.

An aviation safety expert who did not wish to be named said, “Aircraft do not go for maintenanc­e twice with barely two months of its flying. This means that they did not get the paperwork done as required.”

Last week, HT had reported that seaplane services were unable to attract passengers as expected.

According to sources, it is flying with around 50% capacity. The airline, however, maintained that their flights to

 ??  ?? Twin Otter 300 seaplane is a property of a Maldivian company.
Twin Otter 300 seaplane is a property of a Maldivian company.

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