Air India operates ‘world’s longest all-women flight’

The non-stop Delhi-San Francisco flight took off from the national capital on March 6.

March 07, 2016 05:50 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 04:09 am IST - New Delhi

Captain Kshamta Bajpayee and captain Shubhangi Singh along with First Officers Ramya Kirti Gupta and Captain Amrit Namdhari pose ahead of their flight at a function in New Delhi.

Captain Kshamta Bajpayee and captain Shubhangi Singh along with First Officers Ramya Kirti Gupta and Captain Amrit Namdhari pose ahead of their flight at a function in New Delhi.

Air India on Monday said it flew the “world’s longest” all-women-operated flight from Delhi to San Francisco.

The flight, which travelled a distance of around 14,500 kilometre in close to 17 hours, was operated as part of International Women’s Day celebrations.

The non-stop Delhi-San Francisco flight took off from the national capital on March 6.

“This year for the first time, on the world’s longest non-stop flight, entire flight operations from cockpit crew to cabin crew, check-in staff, doctor, customer care staff, ATC (air traffic control) and the entire ground handling... were handled by women,” Air India said in a release.

Air India CMD Ashwani Lohani said it was a historic flight and “the longest operated by all-women crew”. “The airline has immense respect for women and it is a symbol of women empowerment,” he added.

The flight was under the command of Kshamta Bajpayee and Shubhangi Singh, along with First Officers Ramya Kirti Gupta and Amrit Namdhari.

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