Air India generic
Air India jets at Indira Gandhi International Airport in New Delhi. (File Photo) Image Credit: AP

Highlights

  • Arvind Kathpalia failed the breath test moments before captaining an Air India plane to London
  • He was handed a three-month ban in 2017 for skipping a mandatory alcohol breath test
  • More than 150 pilots from different Indian airlines have failed breath tests for alcohol in the past four years

NEW DELHI: A veteran pilot had his flying licence revoked Monday after failing a breath test moments before captaining an Air India plane to London, India's aviation regulator said.

Arvind Kathpalia, a pilot and senior executive with the national airline, blew positive for alcohol before entering the Dreamliner jet's cockpit for the nearly 10-hour flight to the United Kingdom on Sunday.

"He failed the breath analyser and as per rules we have decided to cancel his licence for three years with immediate effect," an official with the Directorate General of Civil Aviation told AFP.

He said Kathpalia was handed a three-month ban in 2017 for skipping a mandatory alcohol breath test.

All pilots and crew are barred from consuming alcohol in the 12 hours before their flying duties and are subject to regular breath tests.

Kathpalia has denied the allegations, describing them as a smear campaign levelled by rivals, local media reported.

150 pilots in four years

More than 150 pilots from different Indian airlines have failed breath tests for alcohol in the past four years, the government said in response to a 2018 freedom of information request.

India's aviation safety record tumbled this year, slipping from 66 percent to 57 percent on a ranking system kept by the UN's International Civil Aviation Organisation. A perfect safety rating score is 100 per cent.

India's aviation sector has surged in recent years, with nearly 120 million domestic passengers taking to the skies in 2017, almost double the figure in 2012.