Air India pilot caught drunk for third time: fired
Do you know, by any chance, how to say "did you raise your elbow?" in Hindi? I honestly don't but I guess it was this [...].

Do you know, by any chance, how to say "did you raise your elbow?" in Hindi? I, honestly, do not but I imagine that was the question the Delhi authorities asked a pilot suspected of being drunk During working hours.
In this article:
Let's go in order. We find ourselves in India. The commander of a flight Air India, which took off from Phuket and directed to Delhi, once he arrived at his destination he was subjected to an alcohol test and tested positive: his blood alcohol level far exceeded the permitted limit. Moral of the story? The driver was fired and he was revoked from the flight license; in addition to that TATA Group, the company's owner, announced that it would initiate a prosecution vs. the pilot.

Air India calls its policy on crew alcohol intake particularly strict even though, on balance, it is no more than that: the first time a pilot is "caught" with a blood alcohol content above the limit, his license is suspended for 3 months; the second time, his license is suspended for 3 years; and finally, the third time, his license is revoked for life and dismissal is triggered. And this is precisely the case with the commander of the Phuket-Dehli flight.
What if your next trip was because of points?
Join the Training Center and improve your knowledge in the world of travel reward
India's flag carrier leads spot test on both domestic and long-haul flight crews: for the former, alcohol testing is administered before the flight (because alcohol is not served on domestic routes); for the latter, it is administered upon arrival.
It seems, alas, that the fired pilot's is not an isolated case: only in the first 6 months of 2023, According to a report in the Times of India, 33 pilots and 97 crew members were found to be breathalyzer positive.
Star Alliance
HKT
India



