Etihad Chennai-Abu Dhabi Flight Cancelled After Hydraulic Leak Found

An Etihad Airways flight from Chennai to Abu Dhabi was cancelled after a hydraulic leak was detected during pre-takeoff checks. The Airbus A320 with 280 passengers was declared "Aircraft on Ground" and passengers were safely deboarded. Emergency services were deployed as a precaution, but no fire or injuries were reported. The airline apologized and arranged onward travel, with the flight expected to depart after a three-hour delay.

Key Points: Etihad Flight Cancelled: Chennai-Abu Dhabi Technical Snag

  • Hydraulic leak detected during pre-takeoff checks
  • Airbus A320 with 280 passengers declared AOG
  • No injuries, fire services deployed as precaution
  • Flight delayed 3 hours; passengers assisted
2 min read

Etihad flight from Chennai to Abu Dhabi cancelled after technical snag detected before takeoff

Etihad Airways flight EY343 from Chennai to Abu Dhabi cancelled after hydraulic leak detected pre-takeoff. All 280 passengers safe. Flight delayed 3 hours.

"The plane had taxied back to the gate following a technical issue before takeoff. - Etihad Airways"

New Delhi, May 12

An Etihad Airways flight from Chennai to Abu Dhabi was cancelled on Tuesday after a technical issue was detected moments before takeoff, prompting emergency protocols and the safe evacuation of passengers from the aircraft.

According to reports, the Airbus A320 operating flight EY343 was preparing for departure from Chennai airport with around 280 passengers on board when engineers identified a hydraulic leak during pre-takeoff checks.

Following the detection of the fault, the aircraft was declared "Aircraft on Ground" (AOG), indicating that it was unfit for operations until further inspection and repairs were completed.

Passengers were safely deboarded and the aircraft was later towed back to the parking bay for maintenance checks. No injuries were reported in the incident.

Initial reports had suggested that smoke or signs of fire were noticed near the aircraft's left wing during takeoff preparations, triggering concern among passengers and airport authorities. Fire and rescue services were immediately deployed as a precautionary measure.

However, the airline later clarified that there was no fire onboard the aircraft. In a statement quoted by Gulf News, Etihad Airways said the plane had taxied back to the gate following a technical issue before takeoff.

The airline stated that emergency services responded in accordance with standard safety procedures followed at Chennai airport and stressed that the deployment was purely precautionary.

Explaining the disruption, Etihad Airways said flight EY343 returned to the gate before passengers disembarked safely. The carrier added that the flight was expected to depart with a delay of around three hours and apologised to passengers for the inconvenience caused.

The airline further said its staff were assisting travellers with onward journey arrangements and advised passengers to update their contact information through the airline's website to receive flight updates through SMS and email notifications.

The Abu Dhabi-based airline has recently strengthened connectivity by introducing twice-daily Airbus A321LR services to Mumbai and New Delhi in addition to its existing double-daily wide-body operations on the routes.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Vikram M
Typical PR spin, "precautionary" deployment of fire services. But I appreciate the transparency later. At least they clarified no fire onboard. Still, 3-hour delay is frustrating for passengers, especially on international flights. Hope they provided proper compensation. Not just "assistance with onward journey."
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Ananya R
I was at Chennai airport yesterday and saw the commotion! It was scary seeing fire trucks rush in. But later we saw passengers coming out calmly. Safety protocols saved lives. Also, Etihad should improve their pre-flight checks—these AOG situations are becoming too common with budget-friendly airlines. 😕
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Rohit P
Reminds me how Indian airports have become world-class in handling such situations. From emergency protocols to passenger deboarding, it seems smooth. But airlines need to check these issues before parking the plane at gate, not during takeoff! Minor criticism—communication could have been faster. Still, safe travels!
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Meera T
As someone who travels often for work, I've seen this happen. It's annoying but necessary. At least they didn't try to take off with a problem—that's what matters. And the 3-hour delay is reasonable for a hydraulic leak fix. Etihad should offer free lounge access though! 😉

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