Passengers intending to fly with Indian airline Kingfisher over the coming days will have to revise their travel plans.
Employee unrest, a result of staff being unpaid for many months, has forced Kingfisher management to suspend all flight operations until Thursday, October 4, at the earliest.
The decision came shortly after civil aviation minister Ajit Singh told the airline that it would not be allowed to operate if safety rules were not being observed.
Kingfisher said in a statement that it had been forced to make the decision because of “a series of protracted and unabated incidents of violence, criminal intimidation, assault, wrongful restraint and other illegal acts including refraining from attending work, by a small section of recalcitrant employees”.
Reports on livemint.com state that matters came to a head over the weekend when engineers at Delhi beat up a member of Kingfisher management and stranded passengers on one arriving aircraft by several hours when they refused to connect the airbridge linking the plane to the terminal.
According to The Times of India, industrial relations worsened on Monday when most of the carrier’s pilots and engineers, who have not been paid for six months, went on strike.
This week’s industrial action at Kingfisher has paralysed flight operations and forced management to temporarily close down the airline.
Ibnlive said that more than 50 Kingfisher domestic flights were cancelled on Monday. It added that heated exchanges took place between passengers and airline staff at several airports including Delhi, Mumbai and Chennai.
At one time, Kingfisher was operating an expanding network of international flights linking India with the UK and the Far East but it suspended all international flights earlier this year. Kingfisher had also been poised to join the Oneworld alliance.
But overexpansion, the rising cost of fuel and the economic downturn have forced Kingfisher to shrink its network and have lead to the carrier racking up hundreds of millions of pounds of debt.
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