The urination scandal that embarrassed Air India

Jan 9: The head of India’s Tata Sons has expressed “anguish” over an unsavoury incident where a drunk man allegedly urinated on an elderly woman on one of their flights.

The incident took place at November-end on a Tata-run Air India flight. But it was reported only last week when the woman filed a complaint.

The news led to massive outrage in India with criticism of how Air India handled the incident.

The man was arrested over the weekend.

He was also fired from his job at the US banking firm Wells Fargo.

In a statement issued on Sunday, Tata Sons chairman N Chandrasekaran said the airline should have been swifter in its response.

“We will review and repair every process to prevent or address any incidents of such unruly nature,” he said.

His statement came a day after Air India CEO Campbell Wilson expressed “regret” and “pain” over its customers suffering due to “the condemnable acts of their co-passengers”.

The incident took place on 26 November in the business class cabin of a New York-New Delhi flight. The accused Shankar Mishra was allegedly drunk when he urinated on one of his co-passengers, a 72-year-old woman.

“My clothes, shoes and bag were completely soaked in urine,” the woman wrote in her complaint to Chandrasekharan the next day.

The woman said she asked the crew for a change of seat, but was told that nothing was available and was instead offered a small seat used by staff. She alleged that the crew also brought the man to her – against her wishes – so he could apologise.

The woman described the flight as the most “traumatic” of her life and said that the airline only issued her a partial refund of her ticket.

ANI, Shankar Mishra was arrested over the weekend

Her account was supported by a US doctor named Sugata Bhattacharjee, who was sitting next to Mishra on the flight.

He told news channel NDTV that he had also written a complaint to Air India on the day of the incident, but “it went nowhere”.

After the incident, Air India formed an internal committee to investigate the complaint against Mishra.

Two weeks later, it imposed a 30-day interim travel ban on him – the length of the ban was among the factors that generated outrage once the news broke.

At the request of the woman’s family, the airline finally filed a police complaint regarding the incident on 28 December.

A week later, it submitted a report to India’s aviation regulator, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA). Last week, the DGCA issued notices to the officials and crew of the flight, saying they had not complied with its rules for handling an unruly passenger onboard. It also said the crew’s conduct had been “unprofessional”.

Air India has since de-rostered a pilot and four members of the cabin crew.

In his statement, CEO Campbell Wilson promised a robust reporting system for unruly behaviour on Air India.

On Friday, Wells Fargo issued a statement saying it had terminated Mishra and “was cooperating with law enforcement”.

ANI, Mishra was arrested over the weekend

 

Mishra was arrested from Bengaluru on Saturday and charged with offences including sexual harassment and public misconduct. He was then brought to Delhi and produced before a local court, which sent him to 14 days of judicial custody.

Before his arrest, Mishra had issued a statement through his lawyer, where he said that he had gotten the woman’s bags and clothes cleaned two days after the incident.

“The lady’s persisting grievance was only with respect to the adequate compensation being paid by the Airline for which she has raised a subsequent complaint on December 20, 2022,” the statement said.

It added that “the statements recorded before the inquiry committee by the cabin crew show that there is no eyewitness to the incident and all the statements are merely hearsay evidence”.

“The accused has full faith in the judicial system of the country and will cooperate with the investigation process,” the statement added. BBC

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