IndiGo Airlines, the country's top carrier running over 2,300 flights daily with a fleet of more than 400 planes, dropped a full-page apology today as its pilot shortage mess hit day four and grounded all domestic departures from Delhi until midnight. The airline admitted to a "serious operational crisis" from poor planning, leading to over 750 cancellations nationwide today and leaving innumerable passengers in frustration, tears, shouts, and long lines at airports from Mumbai to Kolkata.
While international flights mostly flew on, with under 10% hit, the chaos sparked heart-wrenching stories—like Singapore's top diplomat missing a wedding in Deoghar or a Karnataka couple joining their own reception via video call.The airline's message, shared widely on social media, promised automatic refunds to original payment methods for all cancelled bookings and waived fees for rescheduling between December 5 and 15. To ease the pain, IndiGo arranged thousands of hotel rooms across cities and surface transport like buses for those stuck, plus food, snacks, and lounge access for seniors where possible. They even boosted contact center staff and rolled out
AI assistant 6Eskai for quick help on status, refunds, and rebookings, urging folks to check updates online instead of rushing to airports. Union Government jumped in too, with Home Minister Amit Shah calling Civil Aviation Minister Kinjarapu Ram Mohan Naidu to sort the mess, while the DGCA tweaked pilot duty rules for smoother ops and faced questions in Parliament's Winter Session over IndiGo's near-monopoly grip. Ticket prices on other airlines skyrocketed to Rs 60,000 across nearby cities, pushing desperate travelers to snap up train tickets—even Tatkal ones—that vanished fast. IndiGo vowed "incremental progress" starting tommorow but the ripple effects could linger for days, testing the trust built over 19 years.