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Hyderabad-bound SpiceJet flight detects smoke mid-air, DGCA orders probe

A SpiceJet aircraft on Wednesday landed safely at Hyderabad’s Rajiv Gandhi International Airport after smoke was detected in the cockpit, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) informed. The plane, a SpiceJet Q400 aircraft VT-SQB (Goa-Hyderabad), was carrying over 86 people onboard, and they landed safely at the airport and disembarked through the emergency exit. […]

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A SpiceJet aircraft on Wednesday landed safely at Hyderabad’s Rajiv Gandhi International Airport after smoke was detected in the cockpit, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) informed.

The plane, a SpiceJet Q400 aircraft VT-SQB (Goa-Hyderabad), was carrying over 86 people onboard, and they landed safely at the airport and disembarked through the emergency exit. However, one passenger sustained minor scratches on his feet while leaving the aircraft. The aircraft landed safely, and passengers disembarked at the L1 taxiway through the emergency exit. One passenger sustained minor scratches on his feet while leaving the plane, DGCA said, adding that all passengers disembarked safely. The DGCA has ordered a detailed probe into the incident.

The pilot of flight SG 3735 noticed smoke and alerted the Air Traffic Controller (ATC), who in turn alerted the ground staff. The plane made a safe landing on Wednesday night, the DGCA spokesperson said.

“SpiceJet Q400 aircraft operating from Goa to Hyderabad landed safely at its destination on October 12 after smoke was detected in the cabin during descent. Passengers were safely disembarked,” SpiceJet’s spokesperson said.

In recent incidents, serious safety issues have been reported, including cracks in the windshield, water seepage in the Mumbai-Jalpur flight, failure of fuel indicator and fire in the engine of a Patna-bound flight from Delhi.

SpiceJet is facing a lot of criticism regarding safety reasons. The recent incidents with SpiceJet have made passengers question the safety of the airline. In fact, the aviation regulator, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), directed SpiceJet to operate only 50 per cent of its flights for its summer schedule. SpiceJet assured the passengers that this would not affect their flight services.

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