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Air India pilots' strike enters Day 16, contingency plan to be extended

Air India pilots' strike enters Day 16, contingency plan to be extended

As the pilots' strike enters Day 16, the airline management says it is planning a feasibility study to determine the international destinations that it will fly to.

As the Air India pilots' stir entered Day 16 on Wednesday, the airline management said it is planning a feasibility study to determine the international destinations that it will fly to.

FULL COVERAGE: Air India crisis


The airline has already lost revenues worth Rs 250 crore due to the continuing impasse between the agitating pilots and the management.

The airline extended its contingency plan, which was to have ended on May 25, till June 1. It expects to have completed the route feasibility study by then.

A senior official with Air India said,"We are going to conduct a route feasibility study by which we will see which routes we can operate to in the new scheme of things. We will take into account the economics, load factors and importance of the destination."

Under the current contingency plan for international operations, the airline is operating a bare minimum number of operations by clubbing flights to destinations in Europe and the US.

"The earlier contingency plan was supposed to have ended on Friday (May 25), but it now seems that the stir is going to run longer as pilots have not yet returned to duty even after the courts ruled the strike illegal," said the official.

However, the official said, the 15-day old pilots stir has given the airline to close some of the loss-making routes temporarily.

The official said the agitating pilots, who are on a mass sick leave, had been asked to undergo medical check-up by a board of doctors from the Indian Air Force immediately.

Civil Aviation Minister Ajit Singh
told the Rajya Sabha that striking pilots were not listening to his appeals to withdraw their agitation despite the assurance that they won't be victimised.

"I committed in the house that no victimisation would be done. But pilots are not listening. That is where the situation stands today," he told the members who have expressed concern over the issue.

The airline has so far sacked 101 pilots.

Meanwhile, to mitigate losses and to win back passenger trust, the airline has started a special scheme whereby passengers can advance, postpone or cancel their tickets without any extra charges till May 22.

The airline has deployed the Airbus family of aircraft such as A320, A321 and A330 for international routes.

It is operating only eight of its 17 Boeing-777 aircraft which are normally manned by the pilots belonging to Indian Pilots Guild (IPG), who are now on strike.

Trouble started for the airline May 8 when pilot-members of the IPG took mass sick leave, protesting the management move to provide Boeing-787 Dreamliner training to pilots from the erstwhile Indian Airlines.

The pilots have made four demands which include exclusive flying rights on Boeing 787 aircraft, payment of arrears from 2007 onwards, travel on first class when not working, and the right to be promoted as commanders within six years.

With IANS inputs

Published on: May 23, 2012, 8:21 AM IST
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