Indian Pilots Demand Flight Ban in War Zones, Seek Insurance Clarity

The Airline Pilots' Association of India has urgently called on the DGCA to suspend commercial operations into high-risk conflict zones in West Asia. It argues that airlines lack the necessary intelligence and geopolitical risk-assessment capabilities to safely evaluate threats in active war areas. The association highlighted the lack of formal assurance or documentary evidence regarding valid war risk insurance coverage for crew operating in these zones. It cited historical incidents of civilian airlines being shot down to underscore the severe safety risks to passengers and crew.

Key Points: Pilots Urge DGCA to Suspend Flights in High-Risk Conflict Zones

  • Suspend flights in high-risk war zones
  • Mandate insurance disclosure for crew
  • Centralized risk assessment needed
  • Airlines lack intelligence for threat evaluation
2 min read

Pilot body urges DGCA to suspend flights in high-risk war zones

Indian pilots' body calls for suspension of commercial flights in West Asian conflict zones and mandatory verification of crew war risk insurance coverage.

"Pilots have been actively seeking clarification regarding the status and validity of their insurance coverage while operating into such high-risk zones. - ALPA letter"

New Delhi, March 28

Pilot body Airline Pilots' Association of India on Saturday urged the Directorate General of Civil Aviation to suspend commercial operations into high‑risk conflict zones in West Asia and to mandate disclosure and verification of valid insurance coverage for crew.

ALPA urged the regulator to continue suspension until completion of a centralised, authoritative risk assessment.

It wanted binding directives to be imposed aligned with international best practices and Intelligence inputs for operations near active conflict areas.

According to the association, commercial carriers lack the Intelligence, surveillance and geopolitical risk‑assessment capabilities to evaluate threats in active war zones and delegating such assessments to them creates inconsistent safety standards.

In a letter to the DGCA, the pilot association cited previous incidents of civilian airlines being shot down in the fog of war to highlight risks to safety of passengers, flight crew while operating in West Asia

"This issue was previously raised by us on March 18 with the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA). The DGCA issued an Urgent Safety advisory dated March 19 as a response -- advising airlines to conduct their own independent risk assessments -- which raises significant concerns," the letter said.

However, the association maintained that such assessments fall squarely within the domain of sovereign authorities and specialised agencies.

"Pilots have been actively seeking clarification regarding the status and validity of their insurance coverage while operating into such high-risk zones. To date, no documentary evidence or formal assurance has been provided to confirm that adequate war risk insurance coverage remains valid under these circumstances," the association flagged.

Perhaps, the lapse is due to airlines not having suitable and adequate insurance riders entirely, ALPA suggested.

Iran Air Flight 655 was shot down by the US during the previous conflict of similar circumstances, while Libyan Arab Airlines Flight 114 was shot down by Israel, and Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 was shot down by Iran, ALPA cited previous examples.

It called on the regulator to initiate a thorough enquiry into the decision-making processes within Air India, particularly the roles of the Vice President - Operations and the Crew Scheduling Department.

As the airline is conducting its operations in West Asia, the association wants accountability to be determined "for exposing crew and passengers to such risks, particularly if found not to have adequate war risk insurance."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As someone who flies frequently to Dubai for work, this is alarming. The insurance part is especially worrying. Are we flying without proper coverage? The authorities need to clarify this immediately and suspend flights if needed. Safety first, always.
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Rohit P
Fully support ALPA on this. The examples of flights being shot down are not from ancient history. It has happened recently. Why are we taking chances with Indian lives? DGCA should act as the supreme authority, not pass the buck to airlines who are under pressure to keep routes running for profit.
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Priya S
While safety is paramount, a complete suspension might be too extreme and affect many families and businesses. Can't we have a middle path? Enhanced security protocols, mandatory escorts, or specific safe corridors? A balanced approach is needed.
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Aman W
The pilots are absolutely right. This is about sovereign responsibility. Intelligence inputs and war zone assessment should come from our agencies, not a private airline's desk. Shocking that the DGCA's earlier advisory just asked airlines to do their own check. What is the regulator for then?
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Kavya N
This is not just about pilots. Every passenger boarding those flights is at risk. My cousin works in Qatar and flies home often. We are always worried. The government must step in and ensure 100% safety or halt operations. Jai Hind.

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