City
Epaper

Air India terminates simulator trainer pilot for negligence, 10 pilots removed from flying duties

By ANI | Updated: March 5, 2025 19:50 IST

New Delhi [India], March 5 : Air India has terminated a simulator trainer pilot after he failed to properly ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India], March 5 : Air India has terminated a simulator trainer pilot after he failed to properly discharge his duties during recurrent simulator training for pilots.

As a precaution, ten pilots who underwent recurrent training under the trainer pilot have been removed from flying duties pending further investigation, said Air India in a statement.

The airline further said, "Immediately following the privatisation of Air India under the Tata group, the airline implemented the Tata Code of Conduct to establish clear behavioural expectations and accelerate cultural change to that of a Tata Group Company."

This included comprehensive training for all employees on Tata's ethos and ethics-related policies, such as anti-bribery, anti-corruption and whistleblowing, among others.

It said that an Apex Ethics Committee lead by senior management oversees efforts to foster a culture with zero tolerance for unethical behaviour.

Extensive awareness campaigns are regularly conducted to reinforce expectations.

A structured process for capturing allegations, conducting investigations and enforcing strict consequences was also introduced.

These are logged and investigated by an experienced team, independent of external interference. Under this process, in 2024 alone more than 30 Air India employees have been terminated for various ethical breaches, with numerous others receiving other disciplinary action.

Recently, a whistleblower alleged that a simulator trainer pilot had failed to properly discharge his duties during recurrent simulator training for pilots.

A detailed investigation was conducted and, following a review of the evidence, the allegation was corroborated. Accordingly, the said trainer pilot's services are being terminated. As a precaution, ten pilots who underwent recurrent training under the trainer pilot have been removed from flying duties pending further investigation.

Air India has voluntarily reported the matter to the Indian aviation regulator, DGCA, as part of our voluntary disclosure practice, and has commended the whistleblower for stepping forward, it said.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIndian Embassy in Qatar issues advisory as Iran fires missiles at US base in Doha

BusinessIndian industry expresses anguish over slow pace of ASEAN FTA renegotiation

InternationalAny decision to close Strait of Hormuz will impact global oil supply, say experts

MumbaiMumbai Local Train Update: Overhead Wire Snaps Between Kurla and Sion, Up Fast Line Services Disrupted

Other Sports'Heartbroken and still in shock': Cricketing fraternity mourns the passing of Dilip Doshi

Business Realted Stories

BusinessFM Sitharaman directs CBDT to cut pendency in grievance redressal mechanisms

BusinessSiemens outbid Alstom in ‘fair’ tender process for electric locomotives: Govt

BusinessLike UPI, Unified Lending Interface poised to transform credit delivery: Govt

BusinessIndia's national interest non-negotiable in US trade talks, say government sources

BusinessAir India Express flight from Delhi to Jammu returns midway after suspected GPS interference