Hyderabad Airport Chaos: Why IndiGo's 92 Flight Cancellations Sparked Fury

For the fourth day in a row, Hyderabad's airport was thrown into complete chaos. IndiGo cancelled a massive 92 flights, leaving thousands of passengers stranded and furious. The situation got so heated that passengers protested, surrounded airline staff, and even chanted slogans. The airline blamed a mix of operational issues, while a state minister had to step in to help stranded pilgrims.

Key Points: IndiGo Cancels 92 Flights at Hyderabad Airport Amid Passenger Protests

  • IndiGo cancelled 92 flights, including 43 arrivals and 49 departures, on Friday
  • This marks the fourth consecutive day of cancellations, totalling 220 flights since Dec 2
  • Angry passengers protested, surrounded staff, and chanted 'shame' after check-in cancellations
  • The airline cited operational challenges like tech glitches, weather, and new crew duty rules
3 min read

Chaos continues at Hyderabad Airport as IndiGo cancels 92 flights

Fourth day of chaos at Hyderabad airport as IndiGo cancels 92 flights, stranding thousands of passengers and sparking angry protests and slogans.

"Tempers were running high in the terminal building as angry passengers confronted the airline staff. - Airport Report"

Hyderabad, Dec 5

Utter chaos continued at Hyderabad’s Rajiv Gandhi International Airport (RGIA) on Friday as IndiGo Airlines cancelled 92 flights for the day.

For the fourth consecutive day, the airline cancelled flights, causing severe inconvenience to thousands of passengers.

A total of 92 IndiGo flights have been cancelled for the day, an airport spokesman said. These include 43 arrivals and 49 departures.

This is the highest number of flights to be cancelled in four days. The airline had cancelled 74 flights on Thursday.

A total of 220 flights have been cancelled since December 2.

The cancellations for the fourth consecutive day triggered a protest by passengers at the terminal building. Angry passengers had heated arguments with the IndiGo staff.

A group of passengers was seen surrounding an official of the airline, seeking replies to their queries. Passengers complained that flights were cancelled after check-in.

The cancellations on key domestic routes severely disrupted the travel plans of the passengers for the fourth consecutive day.

A large number of passengers remained stranded at the airport. Long queues were seen outside and inside the terminal. Tempers were running high in the terminal building as angry passengers confronted the airline staff. Some were asking why the airline scheduled the flights when the staff was not available. Frustrated passengers had a heated argument with the staff and even raised slogans of ‘shame’.

Departures and arrivals on key domestic routes like Delhi, Bengaluru, Chennai, Kolkata, Visakhapatnam, Goa, Madurai and Bhubaneswar severely inconvenienced passengers.

A large number of Ayappa devotees were also stranded due to the cancellation of flights to Kochi. As a mark of protest, the devotees were seen chanting slogans of “Swamiye Saranam Ayyappa”.

Andhra Pradesh Minister Kolusu Partha Sarathy, who was at the airport to board a flight to Vijayawada, intervened to help Ayyappa devotees. He spoke to Civil Aviation Minister K. Ram Mohan Naidu over the phone to arrange a special flight.

The minister, who missed his flight to Vijayawada, later left by road.

Meanwhile, eight IndiGo flights were cancelled at Visakhapatnam airport. With flights to key destinations like Hyderabad, Chennai, Bengaluru and Ahmedabad getting cancelled, passengers lodged their protest with the airline staff.

IndiGo attributed the disruption to ‘a multitude of unforeseen operational challenges’ including minor technology glitches, winter-season driven schedule changes, adverse weather, increased congestion in the aviation system and the implementation of updated Flight Duty Time Limitations for crew.

RGIA authorities have advised passengers to check the latest status of their flights with their respective airlines before heading to the airport.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
My heart goes out to the Ayyappa devotees stranded like this. Pilgrimage is a sacred journey and this kind of disruption is deeply distressing. Glad the minister stepped in to help, but airlines must have better contingency plans, especially during peak travel seasons.
A
Aditya G
"Unforeseen operational challenges" sounds like a fancy excuse. Other airlines are managing. This points to serious internal management failures at IndiGo. They've grown too big too fast and now the system is collapsing. DGCA should impose heavy penalties.
P
Priya S
Been there, done that. The chaos at RGIA is real. Long queues, frustrated people, kids crying... it's a nightmare. Airlines should at least provide real-time updates via SMS/App instead of letting people check-in and then cancel. Basic customer service is missing.
M
Michael C
While the disruption is terrible, I think we should also acknowledge the pressure on the entire aviation system. Winter fog, ATC congestion, and new crew rules are genuine issues. That said, IndiGo's communication has been poor. Transparency and compensation are key.
K
Kavya N
This affects the economy! Business trips cancelled, meetings missed, pilgrims stranded. Hyderabad is a major tech hub. This kind of reliability issue hurts India's image as a growing economy. Hope the Civil Aviation Ministry takes strong, corrective action.

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