DGCA, Air India and Boeing 787
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According to the report, the DGCA has also directed all flying schools in India to conduct training compliance checks, quoting confidential memos as quoted by the news agency. In the memo, the DGCA said the requests were part of a “regulatory” review of the accident that killed 241 of the 242 passengers and crew,
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ET Now on MSNAir India plane crash: DGCA inspects Boeing 787 fleet - Here's what the regulator revealedThe Indian aviation regulator Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has conducted a complete review of Air India’s Boeing 787 Dreamliner fleet. The DGCA had reviewed the operational efficiency of the carriers,
According to submissions made in the Lok Sabha, 814 out of 1692 sanctioned positions at DGCA remained vacant as of 31 March 2025. DCGA had 878 staff as of 31 March 2025. At the end of March 2020, DGCA had 471 vacancies and 762 people.
A Saudi Airlines flight carrying 250 Haj pilgrims from Jeddah experienced a rough and alarming landing at Chaudhary Charan Singh International Airport on June 15. Sparks and smoke emerged from the aircraft’s wheels,
Following the AI171 crash, India’s aviation regulator held a high-level meeting with Air India CEO Campbell Wilson to address gaps in flight safety, maintenance, and passenger communication.
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DGCA intensifies probe into Air India Flight AI171 crash with high-level meetings, seeks pilot and dispatcher training records. Boeing, Air India, and Tata Sons hold talks. DGCA also directs flying schools to tighten training,
Captain C S Randhawa is a big name in the Indian aviation industry. The former Deputy Chief Flight Operations Inspector at the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has 45 years of flying experience,
Air India said it has completed such safety checks on nine of its Boeing 787 aircraft and is in process to complete it for the remaining 24 planes.