Eastern Eye (UK)

Probe into IndiGo engine fire

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INDIA’S aviation regulator said last Saturday (29) it was investigat­ing an engine fire that broke out on a passenger jet as it was about to take off from Delhi airport.

The IndiGo airlines flight was carrying 184 people to tech hub Bangalore. It had just begun its thrust on the runway when the fire was spotted, forcing its pilot to return to the bay and evacuate the aircraft. No injuries were reported and officials said the plane was emptied safely.

“The priority is to carry out a detailed investigat­ion of the incident and ascertain the reasons for the fire in the engine,” Arun Kumar, chief of the Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation said. “Fortunatel­y, the fire was extinguish­ed swiftly and the aircraft is now grounded.”

Passengers told local media they had heard a loud bang before spotting flames from the engine fire.

IndiGo said the aircraft experience­d a technical issue, “immediatel­y after which the pilot aborted the takeoff and the aircraft safely returned to the bay”.

“All passengers and crew are safe and an alternativ­e aircraft was arranged to operate the flight, which took off at 12.16am on Saturday,” the company said.

IndiGo is the country’s largest private budget airline and controls almost 60 per cent of the domestic market.

India has recorded numerous air safety breaches this year, including several alarming incidents on SpiceJet, the country’s second-largest carrier.

Seventeen people were injured when a SpiceJet flight from Mumbai struck turbulence in May, while in July, a Dubai-bound plane was forced to make an emergency landing in Pakistan due to a faulty cockpit light.

Last month, an Air India Express plane was forced to abort its takeoff when an engine caught fire at Muscat airport in Oman, injuring several passengers.

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