India’s aviation regulator, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), has dismissed four flight inspectors responsible for monitoring the safety and operational compliance of IndiGo Airlines, following what officials describe as negligence in oversight. The decision comes amid a massive operational crisis at IndiGo, the country’s largest airline, which has cancelled thousands of flights this month.
The disruption, triggered by the airline’s failure to plan for tighter safety regulations, left tens of thousands of passengers stranded nationwide. Cancellations hit their peak on December 5, before gradually reducing as IndiGo announced that operations have now “stabilised” and returned to normal levels.
To regain control of the situation, the DGCA has deployed two specialised oversight teams to IndiGo’s Gurugram headquarters. These teams have been tasked with reviewing the airline’s daily operations and must submit detailed reports to the regulator by 6 pm each day.
What the DGCA Teams Are Monitoring
The first team is scrutinising the airline’s operational framework, including:
• Total fleet and pilot strength
• Crew utilisation and training hours
• Split duties, unplanned leaves, and standby crew
• Daily flight volumes and sectors affected by crew shortages
• Network data and the average stage length of flights
The second team is evaluating the impact of the crisis on passengers, such as:
• Refund and compensation status (from IndiGo and travel agents)
• On-time performance
• Lost baggage handling
• Updated cancellation numbers
IndiGo Ordered to Cut Flights by 10%
Civil Aviation Minister Ram Mohan Naidu announced a mandatory 10% reduction in IndiGo’s operations to stabilise its network and reduce further cancellations. With IndiGo operating approximately 2,200 flights daily, the reduction translates to over 200 flights being cancelled each day.
The minister said passengers had faced “severe inconvenience due to IndiGo’s internal mismanagement of crew rosters, flight schedules and inadequate communication.” He emphasised that the airline must comply with all ministry directions — including fare caps and improved passenger support — “without exception.”
Compensation for Affected Passengers
In a bid to restore goodwill, IndiGo has announced that customers “severely impacted” during the December 3–5 airport chaos will receive ₹10,000 in travel vouchers, valid for any IndiGo flight over the next 12 months. However, the airline has not clarified what qualifies a passenger as “severely impacted.”
This compensation is in addition to the ₹5,000–₹10,000 mandated by the government for passengers whose flights were cancelled within 24 hours of departure.
IndiGo said in a statement: “We regrettably acknowledge that part of our customers were stranded for many hours due to congestion. At IndiGo, we are committed to restoring the safe, smooth, and reliable experience you expect from us.”
As the DGCA’s probe deepens and IndiGo restructures its operations, the aviation sector watches closely to see how the country’s largest airline recovers from one of its most significant crises to date.















































