For the Indian aviation industry, 2022-23 is looking like a year of soaring growth with the number of passengers set to overtake the pre-Covid year of 2019-20. This encouraging news has been leavened by frustratingly long lines at airports, near misses in the air, and mishaps from poorly maintained aircraft that resulted in the grounding of several of them by the aviation regulator. All of this pointed to growing safety risks in the air that have concentrated the minds of airlines, the ministry, and the regulator. Several on-board incidents over the past month, however, have highlighted a less acknowledged risk to flight safety: The inadequate training of ground and cabin crew. Three incidents in succession — two incidents of inebriated passengers (both men) urinating on co-passengers (both women) on board Air India international flights and a Go First flight taking off without 55 passengers on a Bengaluru-Delhi flight — emphasise the point. All these incidents have attracted their share of incredulous hilarity on social media but, in fact, they represent in different ways serious flight hazards too.
Much opprobrium has been heaped on the Tata group, including by the government, for the way the crew sought to cover up the incidents. But Air India was acquired by the group only in April last year and likely retained a large complement of employees from its public-sector days that is yet to fully imbibe private-sector service values. It is possible, therefore, that the air crew may well have been following previous standard operating procedures of dealing with drunken passengers. As one of the cases wends its way through the legal process, the extent of the on-board bungling is becoming clear. Rather than handing over the offender to airport security, which they would be well within their rights to do, given the Directorate General of Civil Aviation guidelines on unruly on-board behaviour — and inebriation is right up there — the cabin crew sought to “manage” the crisis without reporting it. Second, where overseas airlines are taught to handle and spot inebriated passengers, the Air India crew continued to ply them with alcohol.