From the BBC:
“IndiGo: Anger after India
airline removes disabled teenager”
(Teen boy at Ranchi airport)
India's aviation minister has
said he is investigating a domestic airline after it allegedly refused to let a
disabled teenager board its flight. The airline's staff told the teenager's
parents that he was a risk to other passengers. The incident sparked widespread
outrage with many calling out the airline for discriminatory behaviour. IndiGo
has denied the allegations, saying it prides itself on being an inclusive
organisation.
Aviation minister Jyotiraditya
Scindia on Monday promised "appropriate action", saying he was
personally investigating the incident. "There is zero tolerance towards
such behaviour. No human being should have to go through this," he wrote
on Twitter. The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has also sought a
report from the airline. 'The plane began bouncing up and down like a ball'
The incident, which took place on
Saturday at the Ranchi airport, came to light after one of the co-passengers,
Manisha Gupta, wrote about it on Facebook. Ms Gupta said that ahead of the
flight, the teenager looked visibly distressed: "By the time he had gone
through security check and reached the gate (almost an hour ahead of boarding),
he seemed to be in the throes of hunger, thirst, anxiety and confusion." She
added that the parents had managed to placate his meltdown well, "with
patience, some cajoling, some stern-ness, many hugs etc" and that other
passengers also stopped by to offer help to the couple. But when the IndiGo
staff saw him, she says they warned the parents that they would not let them
board, "if the child did not quieten down and become 'normal'".
"Then we witnessed the full
display of brute authority and power. The Indigo staff announced that the child
would not be allowed to take the flight. That he was a risk to other
passengers. That he would have to become 'normal', before he could be
travel-worthy," she wrote. She added that other passengers on the flight
opposed the staff and assured them that they had no objection to the child and
his parents boarding the flight. "A group of doctors, travelling on the
same flight, offered to provide full support to the child and his parents if
any health episode were to occur mid-air," Ms Gupta wrote. But the airline
held its ground, with its manager - according to Ms Gupta - insisting that the
child was "uncontrollable" and "in a state of panic".
Ms Gupta's post has since gone
viral, leading to widespread anger and condemnation. IndiGo in a statement said
it took the step for the sake of the safety of its passengers, adding that it
made the family comfortable by providing them a hotel stay and that they flew
the next morning to their destination. "We regret the inconvenience caused
to the passengers. IndiGo prides itself on being an inclusive organisation, be
it for employees or its customers; and over 75,000 specially abled passengers
fly with IndiGo every month," it said.
India has more than 26 million
people living with physical or learning disabilities, but there is little
infrastructure to support them in their everyday life. Campaigners say disabled
people also routinely face stigma, discrimination and harassment. In 2019, a
disability activist and polio survivor was asked to remove her trousers at the
Kolkata airport. Two years before that, a female para-athlete was forced to
sleep on the floor of a train as she had been allotted an upper berth against
the rules.
^ After reading this and other
accounts I have to side with the Parents and the Disabled Child over IndiGo. Airlines
around the world – especially their Employees in the Airport and on the Plane –
have longed abused their Carte Blanche authority (especially since September 11, 2001) whether
it is with the Disabled or simply a Passenger complaining about poor service or
delays. Every country needs a much better system to reign-in the airlines and
their employees from abusing their powers to openly discriminate against people.
^
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