The crisis surrounding Air India intensified today as investigators prepare to release the final report into last year’s fatal crash near Mangalore. The accident, which claimed 158 lives, has raised troubling questions about the effectiveness of the British-style safety oversight model adopted by India’s civil aviation regulator.
The report, expected within days, is believed to cite systemic failures in pilot training, fatigue management, and regulatory enforcement. Sources familiar with the inquiry indicate that the Maharashtra-bound flight was operating with a crew that had logged excessive duty hours, a violation of international standards. The captain, it has emerged, had a history of procedural lapses that went unaddressed by the airline.
For decades, India has modelled its aviation safety framework on the British system, which emphasises self-regulation by airlines and a non-punitive reporting culture. However, critics argue that this approach has been ill-suited to India’s rapidly expanding, cost-sensitive market. The Mangalore crash is the latest in a series of incidents that have exposed gaps in implementation.
The British model, developed by the Civil Aviation Authority and used in many Commonwealth nations, relies on airlines to voluntarily report safety data. In return, regulators refrain from penalising honest mistakes. Proponents maintain that this fosters transparency and learning. Yet in India, where carriers have faced intense financial pressure and pilot shortages, the system has been exploited.
Air India’s safety record has long been a concern. A 2018 audit by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation found that the airline had failed to conduct mandatory safety checks on several aircraft. The airline was also fined for operating flights with inadequate rest periods for crew. Despite these findings, enforcement actions were delayed and penalties modest.
“The British model works in a mature aviation environment with strong institutional oversight,” said a former senior British safety inspector, speaking on condition of anonymity. “But in a developing market where regulators are understaffed and airlines are struggling, it becomes a recipe for disaster.”
The Indian government has responded by announcing a review of its safety oversight mechanisms. The civil aviation minister said that India would consider adopting elements of the American model, which relies on more prescriptive rules and stricter enforcement. However, industry insiders warn that a sudden shift could create regulatory chaos.
Meanwhile, Air India faces a deepening crisis of confidence. The airline has lost market share to competitors and is seeking a government bailout. Passenger bookings have fallen since the crash, and foreign carriers have tightened their codeshare agreements. The final report is likely to trigger compensation claims and possible criminal charges against senior management.
For British regulators, the scrutiny is unwelcome. The Civil Aviation Authority has defended its model, pointing to the UK’s own strong safety record. But the Air India case highlights a uncomfortable truth: a safety philosophy rooted in trust and collaboration does not transplant well into a system where those values are absent.
As the report lands, the broader question remains: can a global safety standard be truly universal, or must each country forge its own path? India’s answer will have implications far beyond its borders.








