logo
Air India Cuts International Flights After Crash Causes Chaos

Air India Cuts International Flights After Crash Causes Chaos

New York Times2 days ago

Air India, India's flagship carrier, said it would temporarily reduce the number of international flights it operates, after the deadly crash of one of its flights last week unleashed plane delays, unnerved passengers and prompted technical inspections of its fleet.
The airline, which is grappling with the aftermath of the June 12 crash that killed at least 270 people, said late Wednesday in a post on X that it was cutting international services on certain planes by 15 percent at least until mid-July. The move, which applies to wide-body jets — planes with two aisles that are typically used for long-haul flights — is meant to 'ensure stability of operations, better efficiency and minimize inconvenience to passengers,' it said.
Air India's decision came a day after Indian authorities directed the airline to improve its operations. The airline has been inundated by complaints from passengers about canceled flights, faulty cabin devices and inadequate information being given to travelers. Company officials said the closure of airspace over Iran because of its conflict with Israel, which made flying routes longer, only added to the disruption.
On Tuesday, India's Directorate General of Civil Aviation, the country's main civil flight regulator, said in a statement that it found no 'major safety concerns' as it conducted technical inspections of Air India's fleet of 33 Boeing's 787 Dreamliner planes. That was the model of plane that crashed less than a minute after it took off from the Indian city of Ahmedabad, bound for London's Gatwick Airport, last week.
So far, 26 of the airline's planes have been cleared, Air India said.
However, the regulator did find 'maintenance-related issues' and directed the carrier to 'strengthen internal coordination across engineering, operations, ground handling units.' It also recommended that the airline improve its communications with passengers and build a better system to share real-time information about plane defects internally.
With a fleet of 128 planes, Air India operates around 1,000 flights daily, including to dozens of overseas destinations. One of its most popular routes is a nonstop flight from Delhi to New York.
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Global stocks fall, oil futures rise, on a report U.S. may soon strike Iran
Global stocks fall, oil futures rise, on a report U.S. may soon strike Iran

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Global stocks fall, oil futures rise, on a report U.S. may soon strike Iran

Asian and European stocks fell on Thursday, and oil futures rose, on a report that suggested a U.S. military strike against Iran could happen this weekend. Bloomberg News said that some senior U.S. officials were preparing for a possible weekend strike. President Donald Trump has publicly said he has not decided whether to make a strike or not. Why the biggest-ever 'triple witching' options expiration could deliver a jolt to Friday's trading 'I'm at my wit's end': My niece paid off her husband's credit card but fell behind on her taxes. How can I help her? Israel-Iran clash delivers a fresh shock to investors. History suggests this is the move to make. How can I buy my niece a home in her name only — without alienating or upsetting her husband? My sister and her husband died within days of each other. Their banks won't let me access their safe-deposit boxes. What now? Fighting continued on Thursday, as Israel said it struck sites tied to Iran's nuclear weapons and missile programs, including the inactive nuclear reactor in Arak, and what it said was a nuclear weapons development site near Natanz. Iran meanwhile launched missiles at Israel and hit a hospital in Beersheba in the south of the country, which Iran says was near an Israeli military command and intelligence site. There was a development on the diplomatic front, however, as Iran's state media reported that its foreign minister, Abbas Aragchi, will meet in Geneva with European counterparts on Friday. 'Market sentiment grew more cautious following a Bloomberg report indicating that senior U.S. officials are preparing for a potential strike on Iran in the coming days. This added to existing concerns after the Federal Reserve downgraded its growth forecast for this year and projected higher inflation, highlighting how tariff-related uncertainties are complicating the central bank's efforts to adjust monetary policy,' said Patrick Munnelly, partner for market strategy at Tickmill Group. In Asia, most markets were weaker, with the Nikkei 225 JP:NIK losing 1% in Tokyo and the Hang Seng HK:HSI dropping 2%. The German DAX DX:DAX fell 0.9% and French CAC 40 FR:PX1 lost 1.1%. U.S. stock markets were shut for the Juneteenth holiday but S&P 500 futures ES00, trading electronically, fell 1%. Crude-oil futures CL00 rose to their highest level in nearly five months, trading at nearly $75 per barrel. 'I prepaid our mom's rent for a year': My sister is a millionaire and never helps our mother. How do I cut her out of her will? I'm 75 and have a reverse mortgage. Should I pay it off with my $200K savings — and live off Social Security instead? Why the stock market will be performing a high-wire act over the summer, according to UBS I'm 51, earn $129K and have $165K in my 401(k). Can I afford to retire when my husband, 59, draws Social Security at 62? Israel-Iran conflict poses three challenges for stocks that could slam market by up to 20%, warns RBC Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Israel is succeeding but will it overreach?
Israel is succeeding but will it overreach?

Washington Post

time20 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Israel is succeeding but will it overreach?

The Middle East is being reshaped by a fundamental shift in the balance of power: the rise of Israel. Consider the changed landscape. In the 1990s, Israel was closer to a run-of the-mill developing country. Today, its per capita gross domestic product rivals many in Europe and is the highest in the region, except for Qatar (which has a lot of oil and gas and few people). In 1990, Israel's GDP per capita was slightly higher than Iran's; today, it is nearly 15 times Iran's. The country now operates at the frontiers of technology, which is why the Gulf states have been so eager to develop ties with it. And in the last two years, Israel's military and intelligence forces have fought and bested Hamas, Hezbollah, the Houthis, Syria and Iran. Its multi-tiered air defenses have stopped the vast majority of incoming missiles and drones. Put this all together, and you have a country that has become the region's superpower. Even so, Israeli officials were cautious about acting forcefully against some of the threats they faced. As Steven Cook of the Council on Foreign Relations points out, for the last two decades, the conventional wisdom in the United States and in Israel was that with adversaries such as Hezbollah and Iran — which had thousands of rockets and missiles that they could rain down on Israel — deterrence was the best that Israel could achieve. Every time it suffered a blow, Israel hit back, but it all seemed calculated to avoid escalation. The attacks on Oct. 7, 2023, changed the Israeli mindset, much as 9/11 did for the United States. The country's leaders were far more willing to take risks and confront adversaries preemptively, even preventively. Even so, it launched its exploding pager operation last September only because the plans were in danger of being exposed. Only then did the rest of Israel's attack follow, and it succeeded beyond all expectations, utterly devastating Hezbollah's leadership and its rocket infrastructure. This was the turning point. Hezbollah, the foe on Israel's borders it feared the most, turned out to be a paper tiger. In 2024, Israel attacked and destroyed many of Iran's air defenses. Neither of Israel's attacks that year produced anything near the kind of response that it had feared. Instead, the effect of these blows was to trigger the fall of Syria's Bashar al-Assad, who had been propped up by Iran, Hezbollah and Russia. And so, in 2025, Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu decided to act on the threat that he had been obsessed with for more than 30 years — and to act aggressively. He launched an air attack against Iran and, so far, it has destroyed much of Iran's military leadership and infrastructure. While it has not destroyed the Natanz and Fordow nuclear facilities, both of which are at least partially buried deep below ground, it has destroyed much of the rest of Iran's nuclear operations. President Donald Trump, who had been eager to negotiate a deal with Iran, counseled Netanyahu not to attack (by Trump's own admission), and, when Israel did anyway, Secretary of State Marco Rubio put out a statement distancing the United States from the operation. Since then, watching Israel's success, Trump has had FOMO — fear of missing out — and embraced the operation, even signaling that he might join in and use America's massive firepower to blast Fordow. But ultimately, putting an end to Iran's nuclear program cannot be done with just bombs, even bunker-busting ones. Iran is a country of 90 million, with a nuclear program that is now almost 70 years old, started under the shah. Thousands of scientists and technicians have worked on it. And nuclear technology is not cutting-edge technology; it was developed more than 80 years ago, in the era of shortwave radio and television tubes. The best way to put it under wraps is to make Iran agree to do so and verify that through intrusive inspections. One of the dangers of military success is that it often expands the victor's ambitions. After a stunning initial success in the Korean War, Gen. Douglas MacArthur decided he would try to unify the two Koreas and moved into the North, triggering a massive Chinese response that bogged down American forces for years. After Afghanistan fell in a matter of weeks in 2001, the Bush administration was emboldened to take the War on Terror to Iraq. In 1982, Israel's early successes in Lebanon led it to try to 'solve the problem' once and for all. What followed was an 18-year unsuccessful occupation of southern Lebanon. Israel's victories have been extraordinary so far, but they are making the country's leaders expand their ambitions — with some openly speaking about regime change and assassinating Iran's supreme leader. They are also emboldening Trump, who wants to get in on the glory. But it is at moments such as this that wise leaders avoid hubris and overreach and instead set clear, achievable goals that can transform military victories into lasting political success.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store