Mohua Chatterjee,
In an unprecedented whistleblowing act, former Indian Airlines chief Sunil Arora wrote to the then
cabinet secretary B K Chaturvedi in May 2005 complaining that he and the IA
board were being pressured by then civil aviation minister Praful Patel and his OSD to take financially
damaging and commercially unviable decisions.
In an unprecedented whistleblowing act, former Indian
Airlines chief Sunil Arora wrote to the then cabinet secretary B K Chaturvedi
in May 2005, complaining that he and the IA board were being pressured by then
civil aviation minister Praful Patel and his OSD to take financially damaging
and commercially unviable decisions.
In his May 28, 2005, letter, Arora listed the decisions on which the board was
overruled: purchasing more jets than required, disallowing IA to fly on viable
routes to make way for other operators and, even "changing the seating
configuration" to favour a particular aircraft manufacturer.
Two Lok Sabha MPs, Prabodh Panda (CPI) and Nishikant Dubey (BJP) have now approached the CVC for
a probe into Arora's allegations, saying the government has failed to act.
"I would like to place before you a series of events and certain
directions given to me by my immediate superior officer and the minister of
civil aviation which have a vital bearing on certain critical decisions being
taken in Indian Airlines and Air India... I have been constrained to write in
detail to be able to explain the nuances of the verbal directions, the
infirmities in the subsequent decisions taken and my consequent sense of unease
in the matter," Arora wrote.
He also expressed apprehension over the consequence of his action. "Sir,
kindly pardon my impertinence but I implore you to share the contents of this
communication only with the Prime Minister... I would not have taken the
liberty of making such a suggestion but for the fact that like every mortal, I
fear for my personal and family safety."
Complaining of pressure, Arora said,
"During the last one year, almost all board meetings of Air India,
and even some board meetings of Airports Authority of India have become a
farce. Instructions on key agenda items are communicated before hand on
telephone or personally by minister, civil aviation, or by his OSD K N Choubey.
No suggestions to the effect, that the issue in question requires a more
detailed examination or that there are some implications are countenanced. The
key word is 'immediate and unquestioned compliance'." Some of the most
glaring instances are cited:
"AI discussed their dry leasing plans in 99th board meeting held in Mumbai
on 17.7.04. Prior to this meeting, minister spoke to me... said since he and
secretary, civil aviation, were satisfied about the correctness of the plans,
it is expected that we should immediately endorse it during the board meeting.
When I tried to tell him on telephone that the agenda item raises some issues,
I was curtly asked to endorse the proposal and a counter question was posed on
the telephone that when the minister and the secretary himself are satisfied,
what more is there for us to see?"
Arora further wrote that the minister forced him to seek flight slots for IA to
the UK and the US during the winter schedule instead of the profitable summer
schedule even as private airlines were allowed to fly to these destinations in
the summer.
"There is a clear mismatch between the reply given before the members of
Parliament and the real facts. On 18.01.05, I got a message to immediately
speak to the minister on telephone at his Mumbai landline... There was a
conversation which went on for 15 to 20 minutes and minister civil aviation
clearly told us not to file for flights to London, for the summer schedule
2005. He started by saying that since Indian Airlines does not have wide-bodied
aircraft, it would not be advisable for Indian Airlines to apply for the slots
at this stage.
I politely remonstrated that none of the other airlines, which have been
permitted to go abroad viz Jet and Sahara, had wide-bodied aircraft till that
time and if they can be considered for flights to London, Indian Airlines being the national carrier, should at least be given
equal footing, if not precedence. The response on the other side was that,
Indian Airlines should apply for flights to London or for other UK and US destinations
only from the winter schedule."
The views
expressed and Information provided by the author are his own and left to public to judge and rationalise
for themselves.
The photographs added in the article have been picked up from various sources on the Internet
by the courtesy of The Times of India
by the courtesy of The Times of India
Praful Patel, aide sunk Air India, former Indian Airlines chief says : Ex-IA chief wrote to then cabinet secretary in May 2005 that IA board was pressured by then civil aviation minister Patel to take financially damaging decisions.
The bidi producing minister whose family has built an empire selling bidis and paying peanuts to the women and children of Maharastra has shown true colours and ruined Air India and Indian Airlines. Since, Arora has aptly brought out the letter written to cabinet secretary, the IAS babus be Civil Aviation, Cabinet or OSD to Minister must be publically tried/proceeded with and given exemplary punishments.
ReplyDeleteAshok.
Suitably edited.