Picture a little girl asleep on a luggage trolley, her teddy tucked under her arm, airport lights too bright for

midnight. Her flight was cancelled without warning. A few feet away, an elderly couple sits on a hard floor, exhaustion

visible in their posture. Their medication is in a checked-in suitcase they can’t retrieve. A young woman stands alone,

shoulders shaking silently, drafting an apology email to a new employer, she will not make her first day because the

flight she paid for simply disappeared. These are not scenes from a disaster movie. This is India’s aviation reality

today.

IndiGo, the airline that controls India’s domestic skies, has left thousands stranded as its network collapses under new

pilot fatigue rules. The irony is painful: Regulations meant to protect passengers have instead become a catalyst for

passenger suffering.

But let’s be clear: The rules are not the problem. The revised Flight Duty Time Limitations (FDTL) were announced well

in advance, aimed at reducing pilot fatigue that can lead to deadly mistakes. Airlines had more than a year to prepare:

Recruit, rebalance schedules, strengthen operations.

They didn’t.

A phased rollout gave Indigo even more time: First July 2025, then full enforcement from November 2025. Yet when the day

arrived, IndiGo’s network collapsed. Instead of readiness, there was chaos. Instead of accountability, there were

excuses. It is not just pilot fatigue but passenger safety too. Amit Singh writes

Amid massive flight cancellations by IndiGo airlines across the country, BJP MP Jagdambika Pal on Friday sought

immediate intervention of the government and demanded alternative arrangements for stranded passengers, which also

included Members of Parliament.

Raising the issue during Zero Hour in the Lok Sabha, Pal said hundreds of flights have been cancelled in recent days,

affecting travel plans of lawmakers who have to reach their respective constituencies for programmes during the weekend

and return to the Capital on Monday to attend the ongoing Winter session of Parliament.

Urging the government to restore normalcy at the earliest, Pal also asked the Civil Aviation Ministry to ensure

monitoring of airline operations and provide alternative arrangements for the passengers.

“We are in Parliament from Monday to Friday, but on Saturday and Sunday all of us have programmes in our

constituencies... Some have to go to Bengaluru, some to Kolkata, some to Chennai,” Pal said, adding that the sudden

cancellations have thrown these schedules into disarray.

He said over 400 IndiGo flights have been cancelled, including two flights for which he booked tickets in the past two

days.

Angry passengers confronted and shouted at IndiGo airline staff at Swami Vivekananda Airport on Friday after several of

the carrier's flights were abruptly cancelled or rescheduled.

Standing outside the airport for hours and desperate for some information from the airline, the frustrated passengers

looked for senior IndiGo staff members since those on the counter failed to explain things satisfactorily.

"I have been standing here for two hours. Call the concerned person, let us go inside. We are standing here like fools!"

shouted an irate passenger, reflecting the mass mood of stranded people. Even the airport officials did not respond to

messages and calls seeking details of cancellations.

There was no clear communication from the airline, some passengers claimed, adding that they were shocked to find their

morning flights rescheduled to late night with no guarantee that even then flights would be operated.

Arun Kumar Patra, an Odisha resident, told PTI Videos that he had booked a December 4 flight from Raipur to Delhi which

was to depart at 10 pm. "I arrived here on Thursday evening from Odisha at around 5 pm, and only then I came to know it

had been cancelled. I did not have the option of going anywhere else because I had already landed here," he said.

From Delhi, he was to board an international flight on Friday, Patra added. "IndiGo rescheduled my flight to 2 pm on

Friday, so I extended my international flight to the morning of December 6. But this IndiGo flight too has been

cancelled now, so I don't know how I will even reach Delhi. Even a train won't get me there on time," he said.

Even if he found a place on a flight on Saturday, he was not sure if it would not be cancelled, he said, claiming that

no one on the airline's side was responding. "They themselves don't know which flight will operate," Patra said.

PTI

More chaotic scenes triggered by the IndiGo flight disruptions unfolded in the city airport on Friday with angry

passengers' protests and their heated arguments with the airline staff, even as the carrier cancelled as many as 84

outbound flights.

Similarly, 71 incoming flights are also likely to be cancelled during the day, sources at the Rajiv Gandhi International

Airport said.

For the third day in a row, protests by passengers and their heated arguments with staff continued.

A chaotic situation prevailed at the airport on Thursday also as IndiGo cancelled 37 outbound flights, leaving aggrieved

flyers stranded without alternative arrangements or clear communication.

"Telangana, Hyderabad: Ayyappa devotees staged a protest at Shamshabad Airport, demanding immediate resolution of the

IndiGo 6E flight cancellation issue. BJP Telangana Vice President V Raghunath urged authorities to make proper

arrangements without delay,” a netizen said in a post on 'X.' According to a video posted by him, security personnel at

the airport were seen trying to pacify enraged passengers.

"Absolute chaos at Hyderabad airport because of the IndiGo operational mess. All gates were bombarded with angry, stuck

passengers," another netizen said in a social media post.

PTI

As the IndiGo crisis continues, CEO Pieter Elbers has issued apology and said more than 1,000 flights have been

cancelled Friday.

Here's his full statement:

"Ladies and Gentlemen, I am Pieter Elbers, the CEO of IndiGo. I want to share with you that we have experienced severe

operational disruptions for the past few days. Since then, the crisis continued to aggravate, with today, December 5th,

being the most severely impacted day with the number of cancellations well over 1.000, or more than half of our daily

flights.

I, on behalf of all of us at IndiGo, would like to extend our sincerest apologies for the major inconvenience this has

caused to many of our customers on account of delays or cancellations.

This situation is a result of various causes, yet for you as a customer it’s important how we, as IndiGo, address this.

We have three lines of action:

- Firstly, Customer communication and addressing your needs. For this, messages have been sent on social media and just

now a more detailed communication with information on refunds, cancellations and other customer support measures was

sent. Also, we have stepped up our call center capacity.

- Secondly, due to yesterday’s situation we had customers stranded mostly at the nation’s largest airports. Our focus

was, for all of them to travel today itself, which will be achieved. For this, we also ask customers whose flights are

cancelled not to come to airports as notifications are sent on this.

- Thirdly, cancellations were made for today as to align our crew and planes to be where they need to start afresh

tomorrow morning.

Regrettably, earlier measures of the last few days have proven not to be enough. So we decided today for a reboot of all

our systems and schedules, resulting in the highest number of cancellations so far, but imperative for progressive

improvements starting tomorrow onwards. With these actions we expect tomorrow to have cancellations below 1.000. The

support of DGCA in providing specific FDTL implementation relief, is of great help.

Still, there is lot of work in progress, but going forward from here, in alignment with Ministry of Civil Aviation and

DGCA, we expect to further improve every day. Given the size, scale and complexity of our operations, it will take some

time to return to a full normal situation, which we anticipate between 10 and 15 December.

I do understand that these disruptions have caused much discomfort to our customers and has shaken their belief in

IndiGo’s reliability carefully build over past 19 years. My colleagues, all the great IndiGo teams and frontline staff

have been working relentlessly to address this situation. Rest assured, we are doing everything in our control to not

only restore your trust and belief, but strengthen it further over time.

Thank you for your patience, understanding and kindness during this difficult time. We shall keep you updated on a

ongoing basis."

The Opposition lashed out at the Centre over the crisis and Congress leader Rahul Gandhi blamed the IndiGo “fiasco” to

the BJP-led government’s “monopoly model” and asserted that India deserves fair competition in every sector, not

“match-fixing monopolies”.

"IndiGo fiasco is the cost of this government's monopoly model. Once again, it's ordinary Indians who pay the price --

in delays, cancellations and helplessness," the leader of opposition in the Lok Sabha said in a post on X.

"India deserves fair competition in every sector, not match-fixing monopolies," he added. The former Congress chief also

shared an article of his published in The Indian Express last year, in which he had said the original East India Company

wound up more than 150 years ago but the raw fear it then generated is back with a new breed of monopolists having taken

its place.

Gandhi had asserted that a "new deal for progressive Indian business is an idea whose time has come". Sharing the

article on X on November 6 last year, Gandhi had said, "Choose your India: Play-Fair or Monopoly? Jobs or Oligarchies?

Competence or Connections? Innovation or Intimidation? Wealth for many or the few?" "I write on why a New Deal for

Business isn't just an option. It is India's future," he had said. Read his column

Following the IndiGo crisis, Civil Aviation Minister K Rammohan Naidu said various operational measures, including

keeping new flight duty norms in abeyance, will help address the matter. Naidu assured complete restoration of services

in the next three days.

The Centre also announced the setting up of a high-level inquiry to determine the reasons and accountability for the

flight disruptions that left hundreds of passengers stranded at airports in the last three days.

The civil aviation ministry has taken urgent and proactive measures to address the ongoing disruption in flight

schedules, particularly those of Indigo airlines, Naidu said in a statement.

"The Flight Duty Time Limitations (FDTL) orders of the DGCA have been placed in abeyance with immediate effect. Without

compromising on air safety, this decision has been taken solely in the interest of passengers, especially senior

citizens, students, patients, and others who rely on timely air travel for essential needs," he said.

According to him, the operational measures have been initiated to ensure that normal airline services are restored at

the earliest. "Based on the immediate implementation of these directives, we expect that flight schedules will begin to

stabilise and return to normal by tomorrow. We anticipate that complete restoration of services will be achieved within

the next three days," the minister said.

With PTI inputs