Aviation experts raise questions over air safety norms

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After the Mangalore air crash, aviation experts on Saturday raised questions over air safety norms observed by airlines in the country.

NEW DELHI: After the Mangalore air crash, aviation experts on Saturday raised questions over air safety norms observed by airlines in the country.

Founder president of the Federation of Indian Pilots Captain M R Wadia said that successive governments in the country have been stressing on having independent air safety boards to prevent accidents but the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) till date does not have any such mechanism in place.
Referring to the bad weather over the Mangalore airport, Air Force’s former flight safety in-charge Air Marshal A K Singh (retd) said, “I don’t know whether Air India has any policy akin to that of international airlines, which encourages pilots to deviate from their route even if the weather is marginally bad but here we could see the weather was rough and it had rained there.”
On the aircraft overshooting the runway by 200 metres, he said, “Airlines in India ask the pilots to carry out smooth landings and to do so, the pilots have to let the aircraft sail along the runway for some time which results in loss of 200 to 300 metres for the aircraft.”