Curtains seem to be finally drawing on crippled Jet Airways (India) Ltd. as the once-leading carrier on Thursday grounded its services to and from east and northeast regions and suspended international operations for a day.
The drastic measure was announced after the airline informed the exchanges that it was forced to ground 10 more planes due to non-payment of rentals to the lessors.
“Jet Airways flights to London, Amsterdam and Paris from Mumbai, New Delhi and Bengaluru scheduled for April 12 are cancelled for operational reasons,” said an airline source close to the development. The airline will not operate on the Bengaluru- Amsterdam-Bengaluru route on April 13 as well.
Earlier in the day, the airline announced grounding of 10 more planes due to non-payment of rentals to the lessors. “All Jet Airways’ operations to and from the eastern and northeastern regions are suspended. Following this, there are no Jet flights to and from Kolkata, Patna, Guwahati and other airports in the region,” said a travel industry source.
When contacted, Jet Airways said its Mumbai-Kolkata, Kolkata-Guwahati and Dehradun-Guwahati via Kolkata stand cancelled for Friday due to “operational reasons”.
As of Thursday noon, the airline operated just 14 planes—way down from 123 planes in operations at the peak. According to industry sources, the airline now owes more than Rs 3,500 crore to passengers on account of flight cancellations alone.
Earlier, in the day the Aviation Secretary Pradeep Singh Kharola told PTI that the ministry was awaiting a report from the Directorate General of Civil Aviation to decide whether Jet Airways can continue to fly on international routes.
The government rules stipulate an airline must have at least 20 planes for operating on international routes.
Of the 14 aircraft that it operated till Thursday evening, eight were wide-body B777s (seven) and an A330—generally used for long-haul international operations.
The remaining six planes were three B737s, which are largely used for flying on domestic routes, besides on short-haul international routes and the rest three are regional ATRs.