City
Epaper

6 aircraft engine shutdowns, three Mayday calls this year: Civil Aviation Minister

By IANS | Updated: August 5, 2025 17:14 IST

New Delhi, Aug 5 A total of six aircraft engine shutdown incidents and three Mayday call incidents have ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Aug 5 A total of six aircraft engine shutdown incidents and three Mayday call incidents have been reported this year, according to the civil aviation ministry.

IndiGo and SpiceJet each experienced two engine shutdown incidents, while Air India and Alliance Air had one incident each, as per data shared by Minister of State for Civil Aviation Murlidhar Mohol with the Rajya Sabha.

Three Mayday call incidents have occurred, including one involving the Air India aircraft (London Gatwick-bound flight AI 171) that crashed into a building soon after take-off from Ahmedabad on June 12. IndiGo and Air India Express each reported one Mayday call incident.

A Mayday call is a widely used distress signal, primarily used in aviation and maritime emergencies. A pilot repeats Mayday thrice to inform the air traffic controller on the ground that the aircraft is in a life-threatening situation and needs urgent help. "During 2025, from January to July (till date), a total of 6 incidents of engine shutdown and a total of 3 incidents of Mayday calls have been reported," Mohol said in a written reply to the Rajya Sabha.

In a separate written reply, the minister mentioned that the Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau's (AAIB) preliminary report, published based on available factual information on July 12, does not contain any conclusion about the Air India plane crash and that the probe is still ongoing.

To a question on whether the government will investigate the crash from a sabotage angle, the Minister said, "Every aspect is being looked into for determining the probable causes or contributory factors leading to the accident".

On July 30, 2025, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) flagged 51 safety lapses at Air India during its annual audit. These included outdated training manuals, incomplete pilot training, unqualified simulators, and irregularities in low-visibility operation approvals.

Of these lapses, seven were classified as critical Level I breaches, which the airline was instructed to address by July 30. The remaining 44 non-compliances must be rectified by August 23.

The DGCA’s action followed recent enforcement measures, including the grounding of an Air India aircraft found to have an overdue inspection of its emergency slide — a crucial safety feature.

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

International'Positive news': Australian PM welcomes Strait of Hormuz reopening

EntertainmentSmriti Irani offers prayers at Baba Vishwanath temple in Kashi

EntertainmentPreity Zinta on Prabhsimran Singh: Never heard him complain or come late when he sat on the bench

NationalATS investigates alleged Pak link in Noida workers' protest; incendiary social media accounts under scrutiny

NationalRain brings brief relief, Delhi-NCR air quality stays in 'poor' category

National Realted Stories

NationalHeatwave pushes TN power demand to record 20,974 MW; consumption peaks at 460 million units

NationalTremors of 5.3 magnitude earthquake with epicentre in Afghanistan's Badakhshan felt in Kashmir Valley

NationalSeparate rooms, beds reserved; medicines stocked: Jalgaon admin prepares after IMD heatwave alert for Maharashtra

NationalWomen of country are awake now: BJP Bihar chief on Women’s Reservation Bill defeat in LS

NationalKYKL-SOREPA cadre arrested near Indo-Myanmar border; Myanmar currency and mobile phones seized: Manipur Police