India Puts Boeing 737 Fleets On "Enhanced Surveillance" After China Plane CrashIndia Puts Boeing 737 Fleets On "Enhanced Surveillance" After China Plane Crash

New Delhi: DGCA has placed the Boeing 737 Indian operator’s fleet on the “improved surveillance” after the Chinese airplane of the Chinese airline from the same creature fell on Monday killing 132 people, said Arun Kumar’s head.

Three Indian operators – Spicejet, Vistara and Air India Express – have Boeing 737 aircraft in their fleet.

When asked what steps of the Directorate of Civil Aviation (DGCA) took after Crash Monday, Mr Kumar told PTI, “flight safety is a serious business and we are very studying the situation.

Meanwhile, we focus on increasing supervision from our 737 fleet. “A Boeing 737-800 aircraft from China Eastern Airlines, who are running from Kunming to Guangzhou, falling in Tengxian Regency in Wuzhou City, killing 123 passengers and nine crew members.

There were no foreigners between 132 people on a falling Chinese passenger plane, the official media reported.

Two Boeing 737 Max planes were involved in an accident within a six-month period between October 2018 and March 2019, killing a total of 346 people. After these two accidents, DGCA had banned the Boeing 737 Planes Max in India in March 2019.

After the Boeing made the software preparation needed for DGCA satisfaction, the prohibition of commercial operations aircraft was appointed after 27 months in August last year.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *