This Article is From Jan 17, 2023

IndiGo Passenger Opens Emergency Exit On Flight From Chennai

The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) ordered a probe after a passenger opened the emergency gate of an IndiGo flight.

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India News

The IndiGo 6E-7339 flight took off after the pressurisation checks soon after. (Representational)

New Delhi :

A passenger on an IndiGo, Chennai-Tiruchirappalli flight opened the emergency door on December 10, last year, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) informed through an official communication on Tuesday, adding that it had taken due note of the incident and has ordered a probe into it.

A previous communication from the DGCA said the flight was bound for Trivandrum, but the carrier later issued a clarification saying it was flying to Tiruchirappalli.

In what is the latest in a string of incidents of passenger misconduct, coming on the back of two alleged peeing incidents onboard two Air India (AI) international flights, the passenger, whose identity was yet to be ascertained, opened the emergency door leaving the others onboard the IndiGo flight 6E-7339.

However, there was no untoward incident as the flight hadn't yet taken off.

Confirming that the flight regulator had taken note of the incident, a senior DGCA official told ANI, "The incident was duly reported. It appears that the passenger opened the RH emergency exit door by mistake while the aircraft was still on the ground. The crew moved in swiftly and all appropriate action to restore airworthiness such as reinstalling the door, pressurisation check was carried out before the flight was cleared for departure. No safety protocol was compromised with."

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Earlier, a man named Shankar Mishra had allegedly urinated on a 70-year-old woman in an intoxicated condition in the business class of an Air India flight on November 26 last year.

Delhi Police registered an FIR against the passenger on January 4 on a complaint by the elderly passenger. The case was filed under IPC sections 354, 509, and 510 and Section 23 of the Indian Aircraft Act.

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Amid a huge public outcry over the incident, US-based financial services company Wells Fargo, where Mishra worked, terminated his contract.

He was eventually appherended from Bengaluru.

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(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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