City
Epaper

Centre directs airlines to ensure passenger comfort, safety as Pak shuts airspace

By IANS | Updated: April 26, 2025 13:22 IST

New Delhi, April 26 To ensure continued passenger comfort, safety and regulatory compliance, the Director General of Civil ...

Open in App

New Delhi, April 26 To ensure continued passenger comfort, safety and regulatory compliance, the Director General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) on Saturday directed all airline operators to implement enhanced passenger handling measures with an immediate effect.

In the light of the recent international airspace closures and overflight restrictions, several flight routes have been significantly altered, leading to extended flight durations and the possibility of technical stops.

According to the DGCA advisory, passengers must be proactively informed about route changes, extended travel times, and any technical halts during their journey.

This communication should occur at check-in, boarding, and via digital alerts.

“Airlines are required to revise catering based on the actual block time, ensuring adequate food, hydration, and special meal availability throughout the flight, including any technical stopovers,” said the advisory.

Also, carriers must ensure onboard medical supplies are sufficient and verify the availability of emergency services at potential technical halt airports.

According to the aviation regulator, call centres and customer service teams must be ready to handle delays, missed connections, and provide assistance or compensation as required by applicable regulations.

Seamless coordination is essential among flight operations, customer service, ground handling, inflight services, and medical partners.

“All airlines have been asked to treat this directive as mandatory. Failure to comply may attract regulatory action under the applicable Civil Aviation Requirements (CAR). This directive is effective immediately and will remain in force until further notice,” said the regulator.

Indian airlines have announced that their international flights will take an alternative extended route, after Pakistan closed its airspace for India amid rising diplomatic tensions following the Islamabad-sponsored barbaric Pahalgam terror attack in Jammu and Kashmir.

Airlines from airports in north India, including Delhi, Lucknow and Amritsar, will now have to take a detour to Gujarat or Maharashtra and then turn right for Europe, North America, or West Asia. With this, the duration of some of the US and European flights operated by Indian airlines will increase in the range of 2 to 2.5 hours.

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

InternationalUS: Department of Homeland Security triples self-deportation stipend till year end

NationalSurat Fire: Massive Blaze Erupts at Furniture Warehouse in Gujarat (Watch Video)

Other SportsPakistan withdraws players from US Junior squash after age verification not accepted: Report

Hockey"Hockey India League is exciting": Vedanta Kalinga Lancers co-captain Arthur Van Doren

AurangabadOne killed in car collision

National Realted Stories

NationalRajasthan Police cracks down against sand mafia; 5 SHOs suspended, 6 transferred

NationalJ.P. Nadda arrives in MP's Indore, CM Mohan Yadav calls him 'lucky' for BJP

National‘Conspiracy to sell Aravali’: Gehlot accuses Centre of turning CEC into ‘puppet’

NationalPMK leader Ramadoss calls for federal structure in Sri Lanka, says unitary system failed Tamils

NationalDigital off: K’taka village witnesses daily two-hour blackout to boost children’s education