IndiGo airplanes on busy airport tarmac with passengers boarding as flights resume after cancellations.
IndiGo airplanes on busy airport tarmac with passengers boarding as flights resume after cancellations.
Larawang ginawa ng AI

IndiGo resumes most flights after week of cancellations

Larawang ginawa ng AI

After five days of flight cancellations and delays, IndiGo operated over 1,500 flights on Sunday as DGCA issued a notice to its CEO. The civil aviation ministry imposed refund deadlines and fare caps. Passengers remain affected, but 95% of the network has been restored.

IndiGo airline faced a severe operational crisis over the past five days due to the implementation of new Flight Duty Time Limit (FDTL) norms, leading to over 2,000 flight cancellations since Tuesday and thousands of passengers stranded. On Saturday, 106 flights were canceled at Delhi's IGI Airport, with passengers also affected in Mumbai. The DGCA issued a show cause notice to CEO Pieter Elbers and Accountable Manager Isidro Porqueras, demanding a response within 24 hours, alleging lapses in planning, oversight, and resource management.

In a statement, IndiGo said it operated over 700 flights on Friday, connecting 113 destinations, as part of a network reboot. On Sunday, over 1,500 flights are operating to 135 out of 138 destinations, with 95% connectivity restored. The airline apologized to passengers: "We understand that we have a long way to go, but we are fully committed to rebuilding the trust of our customers."

The Ministry of Civil Aviation directed IndiGo to process all refunds for canceled flights by 8 pm on December 7 and return separated baggage within two days. Fare caps were imposed: Rs 7,500 for up to 500 km, Rs 12,000 for 500-1,000 km, Rs 15,000 for 1,000-1,500 km, and Rs 18,000 for over 1,500 km. DGCA granted temporary exemptions from FDTL rules, including lifting night landing limits. Minister Ram Mohan Naidu held a meeting with the CEO. Passengers like Shubham Panda complained that ticket prices surged from Rs 27,000 to Rs 2 lakh.

Ano ang sinasabi ng mga tao

Discussions on X reflect widespread frustration with IndiGo's week-long flight cancellations, blaming inadequate preparation for new DGCA pilot rest rules and accusing the airline of using disruptions to pressure regulators. Passengers highlight stranded situations, missed events, and refund delays, while skeptics call it corporate blackmail enabled by monopoly. Neutral updates note government mandates for refunds, fare caps, and DGCA's show-cause notice to the CEO; some mention partial resumption with over 1,500 flights operated on December 7 amid ongoing chaos.

Mga Kaugnay na Artikulo

India's largest airline IndiGo has introduced new fuel surcharges of up to ₹950 per sector on domestic routes and ₹10,000 on long-haul international flights following an 8.56% rise in jet fuel prices. The government coordinated a partial and staggered increase with oil companies. The changes apply to all new bookings from April 2.

Iniulat ng AI

Odisha's Balangir district consumer forum ordered Indian Railways on April 18 to pay ₹1.3 lakh to a passenger who missed a connecting flight due to a nearly seven-hour train delay in 2024. The amount covers losses, mental agony, litigation costs, and penalties for delayed compliance. The passenger received the payment on April 19.

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