Airlines will have to refund tickets booked during the COVID-19 lockdown within three weeks without cancellation fees if a customer requests for it, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) said on Thursday.
The directive will apply to all domestic and international tickets booked during the first phase of the nationwide lockdown, that began on March 25 and was extended till May 3 on April 14, for travel between the entire period.
Several consumer groups had raised complaints after most private airlines refused to refund the tickets, offering them options to reschedule instead.
India had banned all international flights from March 22 and domestic ones from March 25 to check the spread of coronavirus in the country.
However, most airlines except national carrier Air India continued to take bookings for domestic flights for the period beyond the first phase of the lockdown on April 14.
After the lockdown was extended till next month, the DGCA issued a circular saying all international as well as domestic flights will remain suspended till May 3.
Private airlines, however, said they will not refund the tickets already booked and will offer free rescheduling but will charge customers for the fare difference, if any, at the time of re-booking.
The move triggered anger among customers who said it was unfair to those who have purchased a service that the airlines cannot deliver, albeit through no fault of their own.
The DGCA's new order will spell more trouble for airlines that have been pummelled by the worst crisis in history following the coronavirus pandemic.
DGCA said airlines will have to refund tickets within three weeks if customers ask for it.
With no signs of a government financial assistance plan yet, the coronavirus crisis has pushed the country's grounded aviation sector perilously close to bankruptcy.
Experts say there is still no clarity if a few of these airlines will even survive the next few months without a massive government bailout of the sector.
Budget carriers IndiGo, GoAir and SpiceJet have already announced steep across-the-board salary cuts. GoAir, which has begun terminating the contracts of its expat pilots, has also asked its staff to go on temporary leave without pay on a rotational basis.
World
India
State & District Details
State | Cases | Active | Recovered | Deaths |
---|
Covid-19 Cases Rising Again: WHO Issues Urgent Alert On Potentially Severe Variants Experts Blame Covid-19 Pandemic For Low Sale Of High Heels, Here's Why Covid-19 Still Driving High Mortality Rate In This Country Nurse Raped, Killed On Way Home, Body Found 9 Days Later In UP "Don't Expect Anything From Me": Kolkata Hospital's New Principal Loses Cool "Took Advantage Of His Addiction": 5 Charged Over Matthew Perry's Death US Delegation Led By Top Diplomat Richard Verma To Visit India Tomorrow 6.3 Magnitude Earthquake Hits Taiwan: Weather Agency Relationship With India Remains One Of Great Importance: Pentagon Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.