Akasa Air Plane Returns After Contact Incident at Delhi Airport

An Akasa Air aircraft scheduled to fly from Delhi to Hyderabad had to return to the bay after another airline's plane made contact with it while it was stationary. All passengers and crew disembarked safely, with the airline arranging alternative travel to Hyderabad. The incident involved a SpiceJet B737-700 aircraft taxiing at Delhi airport, which sustained damage and has been grounded. Separately, Akasa Air confirmed it continues to operate flights to Jeddah from several Indian cities while evaluating the resumption of services to Abu Dhabi, based on ongoing safety assessments of the Middle East situation.

Key Points: Akasa Air Aircraft Contact Incident at Delhi Airport

  • Akasa Air flight to Hyderabad returned to bay
  • Aircraft contacted while stationary
  • SpiceJet B737-700 involved, grounded
  • All passengers and crew safe, alternative travel arranged
  • Airline continues Middle East ops with safety assessment
2 min read

Akasa Air aircraft returned to bay in Delhi after contact by another airline's plane

An Akasa Air flight returned to bay in Delhi after contact with another aircraft. All passengers safe. SpiceJet aircraft grounded.

"All passengers and crew were safely disembarked, and our ground teams are making alternative arrangements... - Airline Spokesperson"

New Delhi, April 17

An Akasa Air aircraft operating flight from Delhi to Hyderabad had to return to the bay on Thursday and all passengers and crew disembarked safely.

An airlines spokesperson stated that preliminary information indicates that Akasa's aircraft was stationary when another airline's aircraft made contact with it.

"All passengers and crew were safely disembarked, and our ground teams are making alternative arrangements to fly our passengers to Hyderabad at the earliest," the spokesperson added.

SpiceJet B737-700 aircraft was involved in a ground occurrence while taxiing at Delhi airport, resulting in damage to its right winglet and the left-hand horizontal stabiliser of another aircraft belonging to a different airline.

According to the airlines' spokesperson, the SpiceJet aircraft has been grounded at Delhi.

Separately, earlier last week, in view of the prevailing situation in the Middle East, Akasa Air announced that it will continue operating flights between Jeddah and Indian cities, including Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, Mumbai, Kochi, and Kozhikode, as per the airline's ongoing safety assessment.

The carrier further stated that it is progressively evaluating the resumption of flights from and to Abu Dhabi.

"Following our ongoing safety assessment and a review of the prevailing situation in the Middle East, we continue to operate flights to/from Jeddah and Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, Mumbai, Kochi and Kozhikode. Further, we continue to progressively evaluate resumption of flights to/from Abu Dhabi," Akasa Air said in a post on X.

The airline urged the passengers to visit the official website akasaair.com or use their Akasa Air Android and iOS application for flight details and booking.

Akasa Air clarified that operations are being conducted based on the prevailing situation and ongoing safety assessments, and schedules may be subject to change.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
I was supposed to be on that Hyderabad flight! Got a message about the cancellation and they rebooked me on the next available one. The process was smooth, but the reason is worrying. How does one plane hit another when it's just sitting there?
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Aditya G
Safety first, always. Good to see Akasa handling it professionally with alternative arrangements. But SpiceJet needs to answer for this. Their operational issues are becoming a pattern. Passengers deserve better.
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Priya S
Delhi airport is so congested. This was bound to happen. They keep adding flights without improving infrastructure. Hope the investigation is thorough and not just a routine report filed away.
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Michael C
Respectfully, while the immediate response seems good, the article mentions Akasa is still flying to Jeddah given the Middle East situation. That seems like a bigger safety call than a ground incident. Priorities?
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Kavya N
Thank God no one was hurt! These planes are massive, a small mistake can lead to disaster. The pilots and ground staff have a huge responsibility. Let's not just blame, but also support better training and systems. 🇮🇳

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