For representational purposes (Photo | PTI) 
Nation

IndiGo bars specially-abled child from boarding flight for 'panicking'; DGCA begins probe

As the boy was prohibited from boarding the airline's Ranchi-Hyderabad flight on Saturday at the Ranchi airport, his parents also decided to not take the flight, they noted.

PTI

NEW DELHI: IndiGo barred a specially-abled child from boarding a flight at the Ranchi airport as he was in "a state of panic", following which the aviation regulator DGCA has started a probe and asked the airline to submit a report, officials said on Sunday.

As the boy was prohibited from boarding the airline's Ranchi-Hyderabad flight on Saturday, his parents also decided to not take the flight, they noted.

DGCA chief Arun Kumar told PTI that the regulator has sought a report from IndiGo on this matter.

The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) is probing this incident and it will take appropriate action, he said.

When asked about the incident, IndiGo said, "In view of the safety of passengers, a specially-abled child could not board the flight with his family on May 7, as he was in a state of panic." The ground staff waited for him to calm down till the last minute but to no avail, it said.

The airline made the family comfortable by providing them a hotel stay and they flew the next morning to their destination, it said.

"We regret the inconvenience caused to the passengers. IndiGo prides itself on being an inclusive organisation, be it for employees or its customers; and over 75,000 specially-abled passengers fly with IndiGo every month," it said.

Trump says US will be out of Iran 'pretty quickly' as Tehran rubbishes claims of seeking ceasefire

Amid Opposition protests and Kerala poll concerns, Centre drops debate on new FCRA bill

Amazon's cloud computing facility in Bahrain hit in Iranian strike, reports Financial Times

IndiGo revises fuel charges by up to Rs 950 for domestic flights after jet fuel price hike

Punjab begins first-ever drug and socio-economic census; 28,000 employees to survey 65 lakh families

SCROLL FOR NEXT