NEWS

Rediff.com » News

AI pilots' body writes to DGCA about 'stressed' junior pilots in cockpit
April 02, 2015
An Air India pilots' body has urged DGCA to look into the issue of deployment of a section of its "stressed" junior pilots in the cockpit, days after the Germanwings pane crash.

Stating that some 30-odd co-pilots were being "forced to work overtime" without any remuneration, the Indian Commercial Pilots Association (ICPA), in a letter to the aviation regulator today alleged that "putting these highly-stressed and financially over-burdened co-pilots in the same cockpit... is a perfect recipe for disaster."

ICPA represents the narrow-body Airbus A320 pilots in the airline. This is the second time in the last 10 days that ICPA has red-flagged safety concerns in Air India to the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA). 

Earlier, it had asked DGCA to ground the airline's 26-year -old A-320 fleet citing safety concerns. 

The fresh communication to the regulator comes following the action of Andreas Lubitz, co-pilot of the Germanwings flight who last week crashed the Airbus A320 plane into the French Alps killing himself and 149 others.

Reports thereafter have said that 27-year-old Lubitz was suffering from depression but had hidden this from his airline, which is a subsidiary of Lufthansa. 

The incident has triggered a debate over pilots' mental health in India as well.
© 2024 Rediff.com