Alliance Air set to fly first commercial flight from Arunachal Pradesh's Pasighat airport

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated: May 20, 2018, 11:07 AM IST

Alliance Air, a subsidiary of Air India is all set to take off first commercial flight from Arunachal Pradesh's Pasighat airport.

Alliance Air, a subsidiary of Air India is all set to take off first commercial flight from Arunachal Pradesh's Pasighat airport. This would be marked as a remarkable step in the history of Indian aviation sector. The flight would take off on May 21. 

The flight from Pasighat would reportedly operate to and fro, three times a week. It would take the Kolkata-Guwahati-Pasighat route. The flight would be operational on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays. Customers can book their tickets from the Air India's offcial website, the offcials informed. 

The airline had successfully carried out a test landing at the airport on 23 April, paving the way for operation of commercial flights. The airline operated an ATR-42 aircraft to the Pasighat airport from Guwahati, and the duration of the flight was two hours and twenty minutes.

Meanwhile, Air India may have to pay a penalty of $8.8 million to 323 passengers of its May 9 Delhi-Chicago flight, which was delayed as a fallout of withdrawal of relaxations given on flight duty time limitation (FDTL) of the crew.

This incident has brought into focus in a plea by Air India and the Federation of Indian Airlines (FIA) which represents private carriers Jet Airways, IndiGo, SpiceJet and GoAir, to the Delhi High Court, seeking modification of its April 18 direction to DGCA to not permit variations in FDTLs.

Flight AI 127 was bound for Chicago on May 9 with a flight time of 16 hours. However, it could not land there on time due to inclement weather and instead was diverted to nearby Milwaukee.

The flight duration from Milwaukee to Chicago was 19 minutes.

The flight carrying passengers who had already travelled for 16 hours, could have taken off in two hours and reached Chicago, but what played spoilsport was the duty hour of the crew -- which was already exhausted by then. Due to withdrawal of the variations, only one landing was permitted for the crew that day.

According to Air India sources, the withdrawal of the variation of duty hours by DGCA following a high court order left the airline with no choice but to arrange for fresh crew which was transported by road to Milwaukee to take charge of the flight.