Assure us that
our demands will be discussed, we'll join duty right now: pilots
Extending an
olive branch in an effort to end the fortnight long strike, Civil Aviation
Minister, Ajit Singh on Wednesday offered to take back the 101 sacked Air India
pilots on a case-by-case basis. He made a fresh appeal to the protesters to
return to work.
In a related
development, the Delhi High Court slapped contempt notices on 67 pilots and
their union for disobeying court orders.
"There is
no bar on taking anybody back but it will be done on a case-by-case basis. We
have said it again and again that we are willing to talk and I have committed
that in Parliament. Please come back to work. There will be no victimisation.
They are not willing to talk unconditionally. They have conditions. It is an
illegal strike. Air India management was taking whatever action they need to
take," Mr. Singh told journalists here.
Mr. Singh said
if the pilots make any credible complaint, we will examine it and take action.
"What they have said in the press, they have not given to me as a
complaint. Any credible complaint will be looked into," he remarked.
“Ready for
talks, reinstate pilots first”
In a chat with
reporters here, Indian Pilots Guild (IPG) said they were willing to enter into
talks with the Minister if the sack orders were withdrawn. "The Minister
has not been or is not being briefed properly by the management on the issue.
We are ready for talks and they know our mobile numbers also. We are only a
call away. Give us an assurance that our demands will be discussed. We are
willing to join duty right now. It can be done in 15 minutes. We are not
putting a gun on anyhone’s head or ever intend to do so,’’ the IPG joint
secretary, Tauseef Mukadam said.
So far,
services of 101 pilots have been terminated for reporting sick and not joining
duty. The Air India management is disinclined to take back nearly a dozen
office bearers of the IPG, which has been de-recognised. "There is a clear
disconnect between what the Minister has said in Parliament that there will be
no victimisation and what the management was doing by sacking 101 pilots,"
Mr. Mukadam said.
Badly impacted
by the 14-day long strike, Air India is operating a curtailed international
flight schedule as part of a contingency plan and stopped taking fresh bookings
till June 1.
The pilots are
agitating over the rescheduling of Boeing 787 Dreamliner training and matters
relating to their career progression. The IPG also accused the airline
management of financial irregularities in leasing of planes, saying that the
airline had incurred a loss of Rs. 4,324.28 crore over five years from 2005 on
account of leased aircraft operations alone.
http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article3449017.ece
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