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AI pilots will get their dues

Updated - November 17, 2021 04:28 am IST

Published - January 14, 2012 11:17 pm IST - NEW DELHI

Strike led to the cancellation of 52 flights

The strike by a section of Air India pilots, which led to cancellation of 52 flights, was called off on Saturday night after the State-owned airline reportedly assured them that their pending salary and allowances would be cleared in phases before March.

“Things have been sorted out. The management has assured us that it would pay a part of due allowances by January 20, a part of rest by February 20 and clear our dues by March,” A.S. Bhinder, president of the Indian Commercial Pilots Association (ICPA) told PTI .

The pilots would resume their duties, he added.

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Protesting against non-payment of their salary and allowances, a section of Air India pilots went on a “no-pay-no-work” agitation from Friday midnight.

A total of 52 flights, 44 from Delhi and eight from Mumbai, were cancelled, causing inconvenience to hundreds of passengers.

Top ICPA leaders had two rounds of discussion with Air India CMD Rohit Nandan and top officials.

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They pointed out that the payment of productivity-linked incentive (PLI) and flying allowances have been pending since last August, sources said.

The flying allowances constitute 80 per cent of the pay package. The airline management on Saturday paid the pilots their due salary of November 2011.

While most of the long-haul international flights to destinations like London, New York, Toronto, Tokyo and Chicago operated as scheduled, flights to or from Kabul, Kathmandu, Muscat and Abu Dhabi remained cancelled.

Confusion prevailed at the IGI Airport here with a large number of passengers queuing up at the Air India counters to find out the status of their flights as several domestic flights were delayed and some others combined.

Sympathising with the pilots, Civil Aviation Minister Ajit Singh said “the employees have a problem…they have not been paid for one-two months. Allowances have not been paid for quite a few months now. We understand their problem, but Air India's finances are in a bad condition. Their accounts were frozen on Friday.”

Mr. Singh said he would meet Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee next week over the Air India issue. “By the end of next week, may be we will be able to pay...I won't say all the allowances and salaries will be paid, but most of it should be paid.” He said Air India had a long term financial problem.

Most of the flights cancelled were operated by Airbus A-320s, whereas operations by turbo-prop ATRs, Canadian Regional Jets and the long-haul Boeings continued as usual, airline sources said.

The agitating pilots reported for duty but said they were under stress due to the financial problems they were facing and therefore unable to undertake flight duties, airline sources said.

The ICPA, which has not given a call for the agitation, appealed to the agitators to return to work.

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