The Austrian airline that passengers say grounded their flight and
forced them to pay for fuel in order to continue their trip from India
to England says it will investigate the claims and repay the money.
“I have heard what happened. It shouldn’t have happened, and I will
investigate why it happened,” Bhunpinder Kandra, director of passenger
services for Comtel Air, told the Press Association. “The people who
had to pay the money will receive a refund.”
The 16-year-old airline has also cancelled all of this weekend’s flights in and out of Britain.
The airline is in damage control mode following an incident last
weekend in which 180 passengers aboard a Comtel flight from Amritsar,
India to Birmingham, England were “held to ransom” for six hours on the
tarmac in Vienna, Austria, after the chartered flight stopped there to
refuel.
Passengers told the Birmingham Mail they were told to disembark in Austria because the airline ”ran out of cash to fund the last leg of the trip.”
When the passengers, each of whom had paid on average $800 for their
ticket, refused to either leave the plane or pay the $31,500 for fuel
demanded by the crew, a six-hour standoff ensued.
The passengers grew so angry with Comtel during the standoff that
Austrian police had to be called. They were eventually led under
security escort to cash machines where they pooled together enough
money to get the flight back in the air.
The flight, which should have landed in Birmingham last Saturday, arrived, instead, on Tuesday morning.
The flight was delayed from the start, moved from a Saturday departure
to Tuesday, because of a conflict between tour operator Skyjet and
Comtel, which had hired the plane and the crew from a Spanish company,
Mint Airways.
Konrad Bhupinder, managing director of Comtel Air, earlier told the
Press Association that Skyjet, which reserved the flight tickets, is
responsible for the problem because the company had not paid Comtel for
the flights.
“We only organize flights if the tickets have been paid for,” Bhupinder said.
The confusion and sudden flight cancellations have left as many as 600
people stranded in both India and England. The passengers aboard the
“ransom” flight are said, however, to be the only ones left stranded
mid-flight.
Comtel Air introduced its lower-cost flights between Birmingham and
Amritsar last month. The Birmingham Airport is said to have also
started an investigation into Comtel.
Despite the mid-flight turbulence experienced by its customers, Comtel’s spokesman says the airline will continue to operate.
“There is no chance of that,” Kandra said when asked if the company was going bust. “Comtel is a very strong company.”
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