Latest News

India aviation regulator says multiple defects reappearing on aircraft

India's aviation regulator announced on Tuesday that it found "multiple instances" of aircraft defects recurring at Mumbai and Delhi Airports, the two busiest in the country. It attributed this to inadequate checks of jetliners.

The Directorate General of Civil Aviation's (DGCA) special audit was conducted to improve safety following the recent terrorist attacks.

Air India crashes into deadly crash

This month, 271 people were killed.

The regulator did neither name the airlines or specify the types of defects that were found. Two airports serve the largest Indian airlines, such as IndiGo and Air India, as well many international carriers.

The DGCA stated that the repeated occurrences of defects showed "ineffective monitoring" and "inadequate rectification actions".

The government agency also found violations, such as a maintenance engineer failing to follow safety procedures prescribed by the manufacturer.

The regulator found that no survey was conducted at one airport, which it did not name. This is despite the fact that new construction had taken place in the area. This issue has been brought to light after an Air India plane crashed into a doctor's office.

hostel

, killing dozens.

The DGCA stated that the findings were communicated to operators concerned so they could take corrective actions within seven days.

These shortcomings were discovered as part of "a comprehensive surveillance" conducted at night and in the early morning at major airports, including those in Delhi and Mumbai.

After the crash of June 12, the regulator

ordered

Air India said it had carried out new checks on its Boeing 787 fleet, but that these tests revealed no major safety issues.

DGCA was reported to have said, citing sources.

You can cancel your order if you wish.

Air India's planned visit to its headquarters in New Delhi on Tuesday to conduct an annual regulatory audit, as the airline dealt with the fallout of several Middle Eastern countries closing their airspace temporarily due to the

Israel-Iran conflict. Reporting by Abhijith Ganadavaram, edited by Andrew Heavens and Mark Heinrich

(source: Reuters)