close
Marzouq Al-Ghanem
Marzouq Al-Ghanem

Speaker stresses anti-terror coordination

NEW DELHI: New Delhi’s civil aviation regulator has ordered Air India to remove three officials from their roles over “systemic failures”, according to a directive seen by AFP Saturday, as the carrier comes under scrutiny after a deadly crash. The instruction from the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) did not detail whether it was linked to the June 12 crash in Ahmedabad, which killed all but one of the 242 people on board. At least 38 others on the ground were killed.

The DGCA directive noted that the airline’s voluntary disclosures “point to systemic failures in crew scheduling, compliance monitoring, and internal accountability”. “Of particular concern is the absence of strict disciplinary measures against key officials directly responsible for these operational lapses,” said the order, which was issued on Friday. “These officials have been involved in serious and repeated lapses,” it said. The regulator has directed Air India to remove three officials named in the order “from all roles and responsibilities related to crew scheduling”, take disciplinary action, and report on steps taken within 10 days.

Future violations could also result in “licence suspension”. The airline said on Saturday it had implemented the order. “Air India is committed to ensuring that there is total adherence to safety protocols and standard practices,” it said in a statement. Investigators are attempting to find out what caused the airline’s London-bound plane to hurtle to the ground moments after takeoff in Ahmedabad. Air India said on Thursday that the Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner plane was “well-maintained” and that the pilots were accomplished flyers. The cockpit voice recorder and the flight data recorder have been recovered from the crash site. — AFP

Kuwait’s recent stride into the era of global minimum taxation, marked by Law 157/2024 and its executive regulations, brings with it a precise methodology for assessing the tax contributions of large multinational enterprises (MNEs). We have previ...
By Omar Ibrahim Belly fat seems to be the only friend that will never leave me. It’s with me at all times of the day: I wake up, it’s there; I have my morning cheesecake (it’s a thing, I swear), it’s still there; it even follows me to the s...
MORE STORIES