IndiGo planes avert mid-air collision over Bengaluru airport, DGCA initiates probe

Hyderabad Airport.
An Indigo plane. Representative image/IANS

New Delhi: Two IndiGo planes averted mid-air collision over the Bengaluru airport just after their take-off on the morning of January 9, senior officials of aviation regulator DGCA said on Wednesday.

The incident was not logged in any logbook and it was not reported by the Airports Authority of India (AAI) either, they said.

Both jetliners were believed to be at an altitude of 3,000 feet when the incident took place.

Meanwhile, DGCA chief Arun Kumar told news agency PTI that the regulator is investigating the incident "and shall take strictest action against those found delinquent".

Officials of Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) said that the two IndiGo planes -- 6E455 (Bengaluru to Kolkata) and 6E246 (Bengaluru to Bhubaneswar) -- were involved in 'breach of separation' at Bengaluru airport.

Breach of separation happens when two aircraft cross the minimum mandatory vertical or horizontal distance in an airspace. Under safety regulations, aircrafts in Indian air space must maintain a distance of 5 nautical miles between them.

Both these aircraft departed from the Bengaluru airport within a span of approximately 5 minutes on the morning of January 9, the officials mentioned.

"Both aircraft after departure were on converging heading i.e. moving towards each other. Approach radar controller gave diverging heading and avoided mid-air collision," one of the officials noted.

IndiGo and the AAI are yet to respond on this matter.

(With inputs from PTI and IANS)

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