Tag: plane

  • Plane carrying Andhra Pradesh CM makes emergency landing

    Plane carrying Andhra Pradesh CM makes emergency landing

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    Vijaywada: An aircraft carrying Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy made an emergency landing at Gannavaram airport on Monday evening, reportedly due to a technical snag.

    The chartered aircraft in which the Chief Minister and senior officials were travelling to New Delhi returned to the airport, around 30 minutes after take-off.

    The aircraft took off at 5.03 p.m. and returned to the tarmac at 5.27 p.m. It made a safe landing.

    According to the Chief Minister’s Office, the pilot identified an AC valve leakage which led to a problem in the pressurisation system. This forced the pilot to return to the airport to ensure safety of the passengers.

    The Chief Minister was on his way to the national capital to address diplomats and entrepreneurs in a curtain raise event related to the AP Global Investors Summit-2023.

    After the aircraft returned to the Gannavaram airport, the Chief Minister left for official residence at Tadepalli.

    The officials were making alternate arrangements for the Chief Minister, public representatives and officials to go to New Delhi on Monday night.

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    #Plane #carrying #Andhra #Pradesh #emergency #landing

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Chartered plane crashes in Rajasthan’s Bharatpur

    Chartered plane crashes in Rajasthan’s Bharatpur

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    Jaipur: A chartered plane crashed in Rajasthan’s Bharatpur district on Saturday, officials said.

    Administration officials and the police rushed to the crash spot shortly after the accident occurred, said Bharatpur District Collector Alok Ranjan.

    While the` Bharatpur administration said that it was a chartered plane which crashed, defence sources maintained that it was one of the two IAF jets that crashed after a collision during a routine exercise in Madhya Pradesh’s border district of Morena.

    Details will only be furnished when defence officials give an official note.

    However, Rajasthan defence officials said that “it may take time for an official note as officials are checking all details”.

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    #Chartered #plane #crashes #Rajasthans #Bharatpur

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Nepal plane crash: 60 dead bodies handed over to relatives

    Nepal plane crash: 60 dead bodies handed over to relatives

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    Kathmandu: Nepal health officials have handed over 60 bodies, including that of 5 Indians, to the relatives of the people who died in a plane crash in the country’s resort city of Pokhara, Yeti Airlines said on Tuesday.

    Nepalese authorities on Tuesday started handing over to family members the bodies of those killed in the January 14 crash of a Yeti Airlines passenger plane with 72 people on board.

    Fifty-three Nepalese passengers and 15 foreign nationals, including 5 Indians, and four crew members were on board the aircraft when it crashed in a river gorge in Pokhara.

    Hospital sources said on Monday that the bodies of all five Indians – Abhisekh Kushwaha, 25, Bishal Sharma, 22, Anil Kumar Rajbhar, 27, Sonu Jaiswal, 35, and Sanjaya Jaiswal – had been handed over to their respective family members.

    According toa statement issued by Yeti Airlines, postmortem has been performed on 70 bodies at the Forensic Department of Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital here.

    A total of 60 bodies have already been handed over to the family members, including five belonging to the India, it said.

    The bodies of four identified persons are yet to be handed over to their families, the statement said, quoting hospital sources.

    “The bodies of 6 unidentified persons are in the process of handover,” it said.

    The Kaski District Administration Office is actively searching for two missing persons, the statement said. Earlier, the reports said that only one person was missing.

    However, the updated statement with two missing bodies was issued after doctors working in the identification process collected two separate body parts, which made them question the earlier statement, said an official at the Rescue Coordination Centre of the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal (CAAN).

    The exact situation cannot be ascertained unless the DNA tests for the bodies are completed, he added.

    “Meanwhile, DNA testing is being conducted on human body parts collected from the crash site,” reads the statement issued by the airlines.

    According to Nepal’s civil aviation body, 914 people have died in air crashes in the country since the first disaster was recorded in August 1955.

    The Yeti Airlines tragedy in Pokhara is the 104th crash in Nepali skies and the third biggest in terms of casualties.

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    #Nepal #plane #crash #dead #bodies #handed #relatives

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Unruly behaviour: Passenger offloaded from SpiceJet plane at Delhi airport

    Unruly behaviour: Passenger offloaded from SpiceJet plane at Delhi airport

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    New Delhi: An unruly male passenger was offloaded from a SpiceJet plane at the Delhi airport on Monday after he allegedly touched a female cabin crew in an inappropriate manner, according to sources.

    Following the incident which happened during boarding a wet-leased Corendon aircraft that was to fly from Delhi to Hyderabad, the airline said it offloaded the unruly passenger as well as another person who was accompanying him.

    The sources said that during the boarding, the male passenger behaved in an unruly manner and touched the female cabin crew member inappropriately.

    Following a written complaint from the crew member, the passenger concerned was offloaded and handed over to the IGIA (Indira Gandhi International Airport) police station for further course of action, they added.

    The plane was scheduled to operate SG-8133 flight from Delhi to Hyderabad.

    A senior official at the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) said it is looking into the matter and will take appropriate action.

    “During boarding at Delhi, one passenger behaved in an unruly and inappropriate manner, harassing and causing disturbance to cabin crew. The crew informed PIC (Pilot in Command) and security staff of the same. The said passenger and a co-passenger, who were travelling together, were offloaded and handed over to the security team,” SpiceJet said in a statement.

    A video clip purportedly of a heated argument between a cabin crew and the passenger onboard the plane was also shared on social media.

    In recent times, there have been various incidents of unruly behaviour by passengers onboard flights. Under DGCA norms, unruly behaviour can even attract life time ban on flying.

    On January 7, two foreign nationals were offloaded from a Mumbai-bound Go First flight from Goa after they allegedly misbehaved with a woman cabin crew member.

    At least three incidents of unruly passenger behaviour onboard two Air India international flights last year came to light in recent weeks. Among others, there was also an incident onboard a Thai Smile Airways plane from Bangkok to Kolkata last month.

    On January 20, DGCA imposed a penalty of Rs 30 lakh on Tata group-owned Air India as well as suspended the license of the pilot-in-command of the New York-Delhi flight in which a person allegedly urinated on a female co-passenger.

    In the incident, which happened on November 26, 2022, the watchdog has also slapped a fine of Rs 3 lakh on Air India’s Director of in-flight services for failing to discharge her duties.

    The enforcement actions for violation of applicable norms come nearly two months after the incident, which came to the notice of the DGCA only on January 4.

    Air India has imposed a four-month flying ban on the accused Shankar Mishra, who is in jail now.

    On January 9, DGCA issued a show cause notice to Air India after finding the airline’s response as “lackadaisical and delayed” regarding two incidents of passenger misbehaviour onboard a flight from Paris to New Delhi last month.

    In one incident, a drunk passenger was caught smoking in the lavatory and was not listening to the crew. In the second incident, another passenger allegedly relieved himself on a vacant seat and blanket of a fellow female passenger when she went to the lavatory. These incidents had happened onboard the Paris-New Delhi flight on December 6, 2022 that were not reported to the regulator.

    On December 29, the Bureau of Civil Aviation Security (BCAS) filed a police complaint regarding the scuffle between passengers onboard a Thai Smile Airways plane from Bangkok to Kolkata on December 26.

    A video clip of the incident that happened before the take-off of the A320 plane from Bangkok on December 26 was shared on social media. In the clip, a male passenger was being slapped multiple times by a few male co-passengers.

    “With regard to the scuffle between passengers on board a @ThaiSmileAirway flight, a police complaint has been filed against those involved. Such behaviour is unacceptable,” Civil Aviation Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia had said in a tweet on December 29.

    Under DGCA rules, the airline concerned is responsible for informing the regulator within 12 hours of landing of the aircraft in case of any incident of unruly passengers/ passenger rage/passenger misconduct reported in their flight, the statement said.

    Besides, the airline concerned has to set up a three-member internal committee. It will have a retired District and Sessions Judge as Chairman, a representative from a different scheduled airline as a member and a representative from a passengers’ association or consumer association or retired officer of Consumer Dispute Redressal Forum as the third member.

    The committee can decide the duration of flying ban on the unruly passenger within 30 days and there could be a life time ban.

    During the pendency of the decision by the committee, the airline concerned may ban such unruly passenger from flying for a period of up to 30 days, as per the rules.

    After the committee takes the decision, the airline should maintain a database of all such unruly passengers and inform the same to DGCA, which is the custodian for maintaining the ‘no-fly list’.

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    #Unruly #behaviour #Passenger #offloaded #SpiceJet #plane #Delhi #airport

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Nepal plane crash: Relatives of 4 Indians yet to receive dead bodies

    Nepal plane crash: Relatives of 4 Indians yet to receive dead bodies

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    Kathmandu: The relatives of four Indians who died in a plane crash in Nepal are still waiting to receive the dead bodies of their family members despite spending their third day at a hospital here on Saturday.

    Nepalese authorities on Tuesday started handing over to family members the bodies of those killed after Yeti Airlines’ aircraft with 72 people crashed minutes before landing in a river gorge in the resort city of Pokhara on Sunday.

    Fifty-three Nepalese passengers and 15 foreign nationals, including 5 Indians, and four crew members were on board the aircraft when it crashed. The five Indians, all reportedly from Uttar Pradesh, have been identified as Abhisekh Kushwaha, 25, Bishal Sharma, 22, Anil Kumar Rajbhar, 27, Sonu Jaiswal, 35, and Sanjaya Jaiswal.

    The body of Sanjaya Jaiswal was handed over to his family on Friday and taken back home.

    However, the relatives of four other Indian nationals have been waiting for three days to receive the dead bodies of their kin.

    Sonu Jaiswal’s father Rajendra Prasad Jaiswal was among the relatives waiting at Tribhuvan University Teaching Hospital to receive the bodies.

    One of the relatives said they want to take back all four bodies of the Indians in a single consignment.

    The body of Bishal Sharma was identified on Saturday, the hospital sources said.

    The hospital completed postmortem on 49 dead bodies on Friday. Twenty-two dead bodies of Nepali nationals have been handed over to their families in Pokhara.

    While a total of 12 dead bodies, including one of an Indian national, were handed over to their family members on Friday, on Saturday, the hospital authorities handed over 15 more dead bodies to the relatives.

    According to a doctor involved in identifying the bodies, the signs provided by the family members were not sufficient to identify the dead bodies.

    “We will try to verify the fingerprints of the dead bodies on Sunday,” the doctor said.

    The Nepal Army said on Saturday it continued the search operation at the Seti River gorge and the surrounding areas on Saturday to find the remaining one body.

    Meanwhile, a team of the European Union (EU) team that was planning to visit Nepal to undertake an ‘on-site evaluation’ of aviation safety has postponed its trip.

    According to a statement issued by the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal (CAAN), the planned visit of the EU’s technical team has been postponed for the time being.

    In a joint statement issued on Friday, Director-General of the CAAN Pradeep Adhikari and EU’s Ambassador to Nepal Nona Deprez said that the scheduled visit of the on-site evaluation team to Nepal has been put off.

    “Given the current context, related to the terrible accident and in mutual agreement, the EU and CAAN have reached the conclusion that it would be in our best interest to postpone a planned on-site assessment visit mandated by the EU Air Safety committee for the time being,” the statement said.

    “The primary focus for CAAN at this time is on dealing with the aftermath of the accident. The European Union will continue to assist CAAN in its efforts to improve the aviation safety situation in Nepal,” it said.

    Earlier in October last year, a team of the EU undertook a study on the aviation safety of Nepal and concluded that notable progress had been made in the country’s air safety.

    The team had returned with a decision to send another team to carry out an on-site evaluation of the aviation safety of Nepal.

    The EU has listed Nepal on the air safety list since 2013.

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    #Nepal #plane #crash #Relatives #Indians #receive #dead #bodies

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )