ID :
241421
Wed, 05/23/2012 - 16:47
Auther :
Shortlink :
http://m.oananews.org//node/241421
The shortlink copeid
India Govt offers to take back sacked Air India pilots on 'case-by-case' basis
New Delhi, May 23 (PTI) Making an attempt to end the over
two-week impasse, Government today offered to take back 101
sacked Air India pilots on a case-by-case basis and made a
fresh appeal to the protesters to return to work even as 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," Civil Aviation Minister Ajit
Singh told reporters here.
"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," he said.
"They are not willing to talk unconditionally. They have
conditions. It is an illegal strike," Singh said, adding that
Air India management was taking "whatever action they need to
take".
With the agitating pilots refusing to get back to work,
the AI management moved a contempt petition in the High Court,
accusing them of "flagrant violation" of the court order which
had declared the strike as illegal.
While issuing notices to 67 pilots and the Indian Pilots
Guild, spearheading the agitation by over 200 pilots which has
spilled over to the 16th day, Justice Reva Khetrapal hoped
better sense will prevail on them.
"Nobody is concerned with the plight of the passengers as
somebody might have to see a person on a death bed... Some
must have missed an important meeting or an important
interview," she observed. The matter will now come up on July
13.
Following the day's developments, the IPG said they were
willing to straightaway talk to the minister if the sack
orders against 101 pilots were withdrawn.
IPG Joint Secretary Tauseef Mukadam said, "We are
absolutely ready to talk to the Honourable Minister...We are
willing to go right now."
Asked what will be the way out, Mukadam said, "We don't
want our core demands to be met right now. Take back the
pilots and give us an assurance that these demands will be
discussed. ... We are not putting a gun on anyone's head or
ever intend to do so. We are willing to join duty right now.
It can be done in 15 minutes."
So far, services of 101 pilots have been terminated for
reporting sick and not joining duty. The airline management is
disinclined to take back nearly a dozen office bearers of the
IPG, which has been derecognised.
"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," Mukadam
said.
"Despite all our efforts to reach out to the management,
they have refused to respond so far. Instead of responding to
our overtures, they further terminated services of 30 more
pilots, taking the total to 101," he said.
Hit by the agitation, Air India is operating a curtailed
international flight schedule as part of a contingency plan
and stopped taking fresh bookings till June 1.
On May 9, the Court had restrained the pilots from
continuing their "illegal strike", reporting sick
and staging demonstrations.
Lalit Bhasin, counsel for Air India management said
despite the court's restraint order, several opportunities
were given to the striking pilots to resolve their issues but
they failed to settle the matter.
Bhasin said the pilots can be tried for civil contempt
under the Civil Procedure Code, that entails a punishment of
three months jail term.
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 43.24 billion over five years from
2005 on account of leased aircraft operations alone.PTI