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Akasa Air moves Delhi High Court, seeks penal action against 36 pilots

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Akasa Air has upped the ante against its pilots who left the airline to join Air India Express without serving a six-month notice period.

Akasa Air has filed a writ petition in the Delhi High Court seeking penal action against 36 such pilots. Directorate General of Civil Aviation is the respondent in the writ petition and will now be heard on Friday.

The writ petition follows the airline’s decision to sue six of its pilots in the Bombay High Court. Akasa Air has has claimed training expenses and amount incurred due to operational and reputational loss of up to ₹22 crore from the defendant pilots in its suit before the Bombay High Court.

DGCA had in 2017 stipulated notice periods of a minimum six months for pilots to ensure that mass exits don’t hurt airlines. Airlines have framed their own policies based on DGCA’s 2017 rule.

However, pilot unions challenged the DGCA’s notice period rule. The High Court is yet to pronounce a final decision on it and an interim order of 2018 which asks DGCA not to take any coercive action still remains in effect. This interim direction was subject to both airlines and pilots complying respective contract conditions.

On Tuesday, DGCA counsel Anjana Gosain submitted that the 2017 rule has been challenged and the court first should decide that appeal on merit. Employment contract between the airline and pilots is over and above the rules and DGCA cannot adjudicate on its terms since it is not its domain, she said.

The matter will now be heard on Friday.

Akasa Air did not respond to the query regarding the writ petition on Monday.

“We have sought legal remedy only against a small set of pilots who abandoned their duties and left without serving their mandatory contractual notice period. This was not only in violation of their contract but also the country’s civil aviation regulation. Not only is this illegal in law but also an unethical and selfish act that disrupted flights in August forcing last-minute cancellations that stranded thousands of customers causing significant inconvenience to the travelling public,” Akasa Air said in a statement on Saturday.

On their part, pilots allege breaches by the airline. A former pilot said Akasa Air reduced their salary and flying allowance, a claim the airline denies.

Pilots also complained of bias and said only those close to the management were given upgrades and promotions. Pilots were also unhappy that the airline did not set up Delhi and Mumbai bases soon enough. “Flight schedules were also very tiring. All early and late arrival patterns,” a former Akasa Air pilot complained.





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