Saturday, 4 May 2013

Air India Pilots sleep as flight attendant accidentally turns off autopilot on Bangkok-Delhi flight.


Air India pilot left hostesses in cockpit while he slept in business class, colleague claims

 

Pilots sleep as flight attendant turns off autopilot on Bangkok-Delhi flight
Kanika Kala who switched off the auto-pilot.

 

Air India pilot 'left hostesses in cockpit while he slept in business class'

An Air India pilot has been suspended following claims that he and his co-pilot put more than 160 passengers at risk by leaving two female cabin attendants in charge of their airliner while they slept in business class seats.

Two Air India pilots put the lives of 166 passengers on a Bangkok-Delhi flight in danger by taking a 40-minute break from the cockpit  and getting two flight attendants to operate the plane in their absence. Their stunt almost ended in disaster after one of the flight attendants accidentally turned off the auto-pilot, forcing the pilots to rush back to their seats.
The alleged incident happened at 33,000 feet during an Air India flight from Bangkok to Delhi last month.
Earlier this year an Indian Airlines pilot was discovered to be drunk shortly before he was due to fly a passenger aircraft. In 2010 a number of Indian pilots were found to have fake licenses, while in March this year a UN report said India was among the worst 13 countries on the world for air safety.
According to this latest complaint, the Air India co-pilot had asked one of the attendants to sit in his seat while he went to the bathroom, and shortly after the pilot asked another female attendant to take his seat while he left the cockpit to sleep.
Following the complaints, Air India launched an inquiry into the incident and suspended the pilot.
Today it denied passenger safety was ever compromised. In a statement released, it said two cabin attendants had overstayed the permitted length of stay in the cockpit, but denied that either the pilot or co pilot had at any point left the cockpit.
The airline did however confirm that the pilots had been distracted while the attendants were in the cockpit and that the auto-pilot had been disconnected during the incident.
"It is categorically stated that at no point of time the cockpit was left unattended by the cockpit crew. Based on a report that two cabin crew members were in the cockpit for a prolonged period on the said flight, the airline management pro-actively summoned the cockpit and cabin crew for an inquiry. As the inquiry confirmed the overstay of the cabin crew in the cockpit, administrative action was taken against them and the pilot.
"They have been suspended pending the final inquiry of the incident," the airline said in a statement.
"During the incident, due to distraction the co-pilot had touched the auto-pilot disconnect button momentarily but the same was connected back," it added.

2 comments:

  1. Distracted by what????No neeed for "cover ups".

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank God it was not in Nigeria

    ReplyDelete