Pilots say IndiGo mayhem was 'engineered' to force rollback of new FDTL norms, seek forensic probe
Pilots at IndiGo Airlines have raised sharp questions over the scale of flight delays and cancellations that have disrupted air travel across India, alleging the crisis was intentionally created to pressure the government into suspending the revised Flight Duty Time Limitations (FDTL) norms.
The allegations come amid widespread disruption affecting thousands of passengers daily, prompting an official inquiry into whether the chaos was a result of mismanagement or deliberate manipulation.
Pilots question logic behind shortage claims
The controversy stems from IndiGo’s assertion that a shortage of 65 captains and 59 first officers triggered the nationwide disruption.
Pilots contest this explanation, pointing out that the shortage represents a marginal 5 percent gap in IndiGo’s total pilot workforce.
A senior pilot argued that the numbers simply do not add up.
“IndiGo operates around 2,200 flights a day with 4,551 pilots on its rolls. Even with a deficit of 124 pilots, the new FDTL norms should have impacted only 5–7 percent of operations — about 110 to 150 flights. So why did hundreds of flights get delayed or cancelled every day?” he asked.
The puzzling scale of disruptions has intensified suspicion.
Several pilots also questioned why IndiGo was granted a large number of additional winter schedule slots despite being aware of an upcoming manpower adjustment under the revised duty norms.
Accusations of a ‘manufactured crisis’
Some pilots have gone as far as alleging that the disruption was intentionally engineered.
They claim IndiGo aimed to present the new FDTL norms — designed to prevent pilot fatigue — as unworkable, thereby compelling authorities to roll them back.
Airline Pilots’ Association of India (ALPAI) president Sam Thomas stated that compromising FDTL rules compromises passenger safety.
“FDTL exists to ensure pilots are rested enough to make critical decisions affecting hundreds of passengers. Forcing a rollback of norms announced two years ago puts profits above safety,” he said.
Thomas further alleged that IndiGo exerted extraordinary pressure to force the government’s hand.
“The airline has gone far beyond reasonable limits to get its way,” he added.
How delays were allegedly created
IndiGo insiders have claimed that standard operating procedures — long credited with maintaining the airline’s punctuality — were modified or ignored, contributing to systematic delays.
Pilots described incidents in which crews ready for departure were inexplicably held back.
“Captains and first officers standing in dispatch were told not to proceed to the aircraft. This happened repeatedly,” one pilot said.
Standby protocols were also altered. Under normal circumstances, pilots on standby are informed several hours in advance if they’re needed to replace an unavailable crew member.
In recent days, however, these calls reportedly came just one or two hours before departure, resulting in predictable delays.
Another pilot noted that minor reporting delays by crew — of just 10 to 15 minutes — inexplicably snowballed into delays of over an hour, due to what he suggested were “created operational bottlenecks.”
Operational changes raise eyebrows
In a striking example from Kolkata, pilots observed sudden changes in aircraft parking patterns.
Aircraft that were typically placed in adjacent bays to enable faster turnaround times were parked far apart instead.
This, according to pilots, significantly slowed ground operations.
“With apron speed restricted to 10 kmph, parking aircraft in distant bays meant longer waits for unloading baggage, refuelling, and boarding. It delayed everything by design,” a pilot said.
Government inquiry and calls for forensic probe
With disruptions affecting more than one lakh passengers daily, the aviation ministry has launched an investigation to determine whether IndiGo miscalculated crew strength, mismanaged operations, or intentionally allowed the crisis to escalate.
Growing pressure from pilots has led to calls for a full forensic investigation.
Many insist that if deliberate manipulation is proven, those responsible must face prosecution.
As inquiries proceed, the controversy continues to raise critical questions for India’s aviation ecosystem: were these disruptions the result of operational oversight, or an orchestrated attempt to weaken long-planned safety reforms?
IBNS
Senior Staff Reporter at Northeast Herald, covering news from Tripura and Northeast India.
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