DGCA Summons IndiGo CEO Again: Amid Ongoing Flight Disruption Crisis

The DGCA has summoned IndiGo's CEO Pieter Elbers for a second time to explain the ongoing flight disruptions. A special team is monitoring the airline's operations to identify the root causes of the chaos. IndiGo's Chairman has apologized to affected passengers, acknowledging they missed important events and faced baggage delays. The airline's board is bringing in external experts to ensure such large-scale failures do not happen again.

Key Points: DGCA Summons IndiGo CEO Pieter Elbers Over Flight Disruptions

  • DGCA forms special team to monitor IndiGo's operations and identify gaps
  • IndiGo Chairman apologizes to passengers stranded between Dec 3-5
  • Airline aims to operate over 1,950 flights as it stabilizes network
  • Board to bring in external experts to find root cause of disruptions
3 min read

DGCA summons IndiGo CEO Pieter Elbers again amid ongoing flight disruptions

DGCA summons IndiGo CEO Pieter Elbers for a second time as the airline battles massive flight cancellations and delays affecting thousands of passengers.

"We are truly, truly sorry, - IndiGo Chairman Vikram Singh Mehta"

New Delhi, Dec 11

IndiGo CEO Pieter Elbers has been asked to appear before the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) again amid ongoing disruption in the domestic aviation sector, the airline said on Thursday.

Elbers had appeared before officials earlier this week to explain the cause behind one of the biggest fiascos in the Indian civil aviation industry and to discuss the further course of action in order to bring normalcy.

As per reports, a four-member team would be questioning him this time.

To understand the real reasons behind the development, the DGCA had constituted an eight-member special team to keep a close watch on IndiGo's operations as the airline battles sustained disruptions across its network.

Two officials from the team would be stationed at IndiGo's corporate headquarters and look into daily processes to identify gaps that are affecting flight operations.

The aviation regulator's move came amid an escalating crisis that has caused thousands of cancellations and delays, severely congesting major airports nationwide and keeping passengers in long queues.

Meanwhile, hinting at a slow return to normalcy, the airline said it aims to operate more than 1,950 flights on Thursday.

In a statement, an IndiGo spokesperson shared that all destinations in the airline's network have been fully connected since December 8, and operations have stabilised since December 9.

"IndiGo continues to strengthen its operations, improving its services day by day to now operating 1,900+ flights that seamlessly connect all 138 destinations across our network," the spokesperson said.

IndiGo Chairman Vikram Singh Mehta said that the airline’s Board will bring in external technical experts to work with the management and identify the root causes behind last week’s massive flight disruptions.

In a detailed statement, Mehta said the experts will help ensure that such large-scale operational failures never happen again.

Mehta also apologised to passengers affected by the disruptions that occurred between December 3 and 5.

He said thousands of travellers were stranded, with many missing important personal events, business meetings, medical appointments and international connections. Baggage delays further added to the chaos.

"We are truly, truly sorry," he said, acknowledging that the airline failed to meet customer expectations.

The Chairman said that the Board had initially chosen not to make an early statement because it wanted the management, led by CEO Elbers, to focus on restoring operations.

"IndiGo is now operating more than 1,900 flights a day, connecting all 138 destinations, with on-time performance back to normal levels," he stated.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Shreya B
I was one of those affected last week. Stuck at Delhi airport for 14 hours with no proper communication from IndiGo staff. The Chairman's apology feels hollow now. Bringing in external experts is a good step, but why did it take a crisis of this scale? Hope they fix this for good.
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Aman W
Honestly, while IndiGo messed up big time, the DGCA's constant summons feel like political theatre. We need systemic solutions for Indian aviation - better infrastructure, more slots, and stricter oversight BEFORE things collapse. This reactive approach helps no one.
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Priya S
My flight was cancelled and I missed my cousin's engagement. The stress was unreal. Glad operations are stabilizing, but trust is broken. Will think twice before booking IndiGo for an important journey. Other airlines, please don't take your customers for granted!
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Vikram M
The root cause is simple: overexpansion without robust backend systems. IndiGo added too many planes and destinations too fast. Hope the external experts they bring are truly independent and not just consultants who tell management what they want to hear. Jai Hind.
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Kavya N
Flying from Bangalore to Kolkata was a nightmare. But I appreciate that the Chairman has finally spoken and outlined a plan. The DGCA team stationed at their HQ is a good move for transparency. Let's hope this leads to lasting change. 🤞

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