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“It is hereby directed to procure the disabled aircraft recovery kit and position it at Kolkata, Chennai, Guwahati, Mumbai, Delhi and Bengaluru airports by the airport operators concerned by March 31, 2020,” a Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) order stated.The regulator said during the recent landing incident in Mumbai, recovery of the aircraft took more than three days, resulting in closure of the main runway.
This led to cancellation and diversion of several flights, it said. Air India had to deploy its “disabled aircraft recovery kit” to extract and remove the stuck SpiceJet plane.
“There is only one old recovery kit available with Air India” and it “is not adequate for the large number of airports and type of aircraft operating in India”, the regulator said.
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