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Air India CEO vows improvements in first public comments after deadly crash


Air India CEO Campbell Wilson said the company is always looking at how to keep improving. (EPA Images pic)
NEW DELHI: Air India’s CEO vowed on Wednesday to improve internal practices after a plane crash in June killed 260 people, in his first public comments about the accident that he said would contribute to a “challenging” year for the airline.
The Tata Group-owned carrier has been facing intense scrutiny ever since the crash, from warning notices for running planes without checking emergency equipment to not changing engine parts in time and forging records, along with other lapses related to crew fatigue management.
“We’re always looking at how we can keep improving,” CEO Campbell Wilson said at an Aviation India event in India’s capital city, speaking publicly for the first time since the crash of the Boeing Dreamliner in India’s Ahmedabad city.
“This year will be quite challenging from a business perspective … We’re also working with the investigators,” he added.
Airspace constraints 
India’s air accidents investigating agency published an interim report earlier this year saying the plane’s fuel engine switches had almost simultaneously flipped from run to cutoff just after takeoff.
Air India also faces delayed jet deliveries and airspace closures due to geopolitical tensions, which have weighed on its performance as it strives to recover from the crash.
India and Pakistan fought their fiercest military conflict in decades in May, sparked by an attack on Hindu tourists in Indian Kashmir that killed 26 people. New Delhi alleged Islamabad backed the attack, which Pakistan denied.
The two nuclear-armed neighbours have since closed their airspaces to each other’s airlines.
“Airspace constraints are a challenge to on-time performance,” Wilson said.

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