Nobody should suffer at airports: HC on lack of wheelchairs and other facilities
The court suggested the DGCA to impose heavy penalties on airline companies for negligence.
PTI
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Bombay High Court (Wikipedia)
Mumbai, 21 April
The Bombay High Court on Monday expressed concern over lack
of proper facilities, including wheelchairs, at airports in the country for
senior citizens and specially-abled persons, and said preventive measures are
required as it is a matter of human lives.
Facilities like wheelchairs should be available on time so
that the agony of travellers can be prevented, a division bench of Justices GS
Kulkarni and Advait Sethna said.
All the facilities should be provided by the Directorate
General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) and airline companies suo motu (on its own),
and it should be ensured that India leads by example, the court said.
"We are concerned about human lives. Nobody should
suffer. What is required is sensitivity from the airport management authority
and all airlines. We have to be very sensitive to these issues. We want the
highest international standards to be implemented in India by all airlines,"
the court said.
The bench was hearing two petitions -- one by a senior
citizen and her daughter and another by a 53-year-old man -- raising the issue
of non-availability of wheelchairs and other facilities at the Mumbai international airport.
The mother-daughter duo in their plea said the 81-year-old
woman had to give up her wheelchair for her daughter, who was suffering from
acute arthritis, after they were given only one mobility aid on landing in
Mumbai in September 2023.
The DGCA in an affidavit submitted to the bench on Monday
said there was a shortage of wheelchairs at the airport due to several factors,
including over-booking.
The court, however, said it cannot accept such an excuse.
Preventive measures have to be taken, the HC said, adding a
person may go to the airport hale and hearty but may suddenly take ill and
require assistance.
"What happens then? These are human issues. Facilities
should be available before time. This is an airport where sometimes flights get
delayed for hours. For a normal person, such delays may not matter, but for
senior citizens or those who are specially-abled, such delays bring in a lot of
agony and trauma," Justice Kulkarni said.
The issue pertains to thousands of passengers who face this
problem everyday throughout the country, the HC said.
The court suggested the DGCA to impose heavy penalties on
airline companies for negligence.
"When a passenger dies inside an aircraft or faces any
other issue, then it amounts to neglect on part of the airlines. This is basic
human rights," it said.
In foreign countries, children, senior citizens and
specially-abled persons are considered above basic rights and are given the
highest respect, the high court noted.
"This is not happening in our country
unfortunately," the bench said.
All these facilities should be provided by the DGCA and
airline companies suo motu (on its own), and it should be ensured that India
leads by example, the court said.
The bench said it proposes to form a committee of experts to
look into the issues, hold a meeting with all the stakeholders and submit a
report which would then be considered by the DGCA for guidelines.
The court posted the matter for orders on Tuesday.
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