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cyrilroy21
21st Nov 2010, 22:33
Rajasthan: Fraud pilots busted

Rohit Parihar
November 13, 2010
Updated 00:00 IST

Rahul Yadav, a pilot with Indian Airlines who claims he has 1,000 flying hours with the country's official carrier, made the worst landing of his life on October 9. The 25-year-old cruised into jail when he was held by the Rajasthan Anti-Corruption Bureau (ACB) on charges of getting a commercial pilot's licence (CPL) with forged documents that show him having flown 200 hours when he has actually done only 22.


The Rajasthan state flying school at Sanganer near Jaipur
Yadav, whose father is an official of the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), is only one of 14 rogue pilots. The DGCA gave Yadav his CPL on the basis of documents submitted by the Rajasthan State Flying School at Sanganer near Jaipur. The school, though closed for two years now, is being investigated in 14 cases-India Today has the names-where students were falsely certified to having flown as many as 200 hours on single-engine Cessna 152 aircraft, including cross-country flying from places where the aircraft never landed.
While similar cases have been reported from Haryana's Hisar Flying club, Additional Director General of Police Ajit Singh Shekhawat, who heads the ACB, has asked the Central Bureau of Investigation to look into the possibility of a national-level racket. "The fraud has shocked us with the ease with which the lives of passengers have been put at risk," he says. The CBI has since started investigations and the scandal is expected to spread to other states.

Another young aspirant, Nidhi Vashist, became a 'pilot' by allegedly paying Rs 11 lakh. Her logbook displays 169 flying hours from the Jaipur flying school and the remaining from Karnal, Hisar and Patiala. Once she got her CPL, Vashist got a twin-engine flying completion certificate from the Philippines and applied for a licence from the DGCA. The DGCA, however, got suspicious when it found a solo flying entry when it should have been with another pilot. Upon inquiry, the centre denied having issued the certificate. This was last year when the Philippines faced many reports about such frauds, leading to a crackdown by the authorities.

Vashist alleged that Mahendra Kumar Chaudhary, chief flying instructor at the Jaipur school, had got her the twin-engine certificate for money. Vashisht demanded her money back and when Chaudhary refused, she went to the police. Chaudhary then issued two cheques for the entire amount to 'settle the matter', which bounced. Vashist then complained to the ACB. A cross-check with air maintenance garage, air traffic control (ATC), fuel records and logbook entries revealed that she actually flew for just 22 hours for which the fee was deposited. "Surprisingly, we found thatthe chief flying instructor of Hisar, Mahavir Singh Beniwal, had also certified her arrival, which points to a bigger and organised criminal activity," says Shekhawat. An arrest warrant has been issued against Beniwal.

Yadav was accorded a similar fake flight in March 2007. In his case, Chaudhary did not even enrol him for the 22 hours that he possibly actually flew. Yadav later did a 50-hour flying course from Canada, which is being looked into as well. Chaudhary has been identified as the brain behind the fake certification racket in Jaipur with the roles of executive and supervisory officers also being examined. He has been arrested twice and bailed out quickly but faces more cases. There have been instances when the ATC recorded 36 flights taking off but the flying instructor showed 178 for the same period. Chaudhary's counsel Ashu Singh refused to comment.

A certificate of certain hours of flying makes one eligible for enrolling at flying schools abroad. "It is necessary to investigate all flying licences issued in India, including those given on the basis of training in India or abroad," says Shekhawat.

The DGCA's certification system needs to be looked into to ascertain whether it makes regular visits and checks to ensure whether a flying school is adhering to given norms. It is surprising that flying data which is maintained at many places manually is not linked via a computer network, making it easy for it to be altered without being detected.

Investigators suspect several dimensions of fraud involving deliberate maintenance of shoddy records at various levels. Most of the 14 candidates identified so far are currently employed with various government and private airlines. The impunity with which rules were compromised raises serious doubts about the DGCA's supervising system as well as the recruitment procedures most airlines follow. With even co-pilots supposed to play a crucial role, the scam may make flying in India more dangerous than it already is.

Rajasthan: Fraud pilots busted: Nation : India Today (http://www.indiatoday.intoday.in/site/Story/119735/Nation/rajasthan-fraud-pilots-busted.html)

itsbrokenagain
22nd Nov 2010, 00:44
India the great!:=

Viraaj Shah
22nd Nov 2010, 03:59
22 hrs to 200 hrs :mad:

fullforward
22nd Nov 2010, 04:08
...the endemic corruption within the regulating agency and you have a gigantic, scandalous fraud with the potential of mass murder.
Hello ICAO, FAA, JAA...

divdby0
22nd Nov 2010, 04:12
Sickening...sickening and disgusting.:mad::mad::mad::mad::mad::mad::mad::mad::mad:

Well, atleast they got caught.

weido_salt
22nd Nov 2010, 05:22
The young kids who have had to scrape together, enough cash to do the license legitimately, would almost certainly have been "pushed aside" to let these cheats through. This also of course is a travesty and a great shame.

When corruption is endemic, the system doesn't allow anyone to play it straight if they want to succeed.

The Chinese up the road have quite a good cure for corruption. It is a capital offence IIRC. If that were to happen in India, the subsequent cremations would enhance climate change significantly.

Aeronotix
22nd Nov 2010, 08:55
If someone asks you to drive your car, just by the way the person shifts gears & releases the clutch a seasoned driver would immediately evaluate the persons depth/skill/experience.

DGCA bribery & thuggery are knowns. But the unknown is how on earth did these fakes get through airline certifications with so many exams, checks at ground level & in the air by airline certified check pilots, instructors & examiners into right hand seats?

How did this Rahul Yadav & 14 other fraudsters employed with Govt & private airlines cross the barrier? With the likes of these and many more who may already be operating in the system the 'smoking hole' theory may just manifest.

Now corruption is taking on pandemic proportions! Jai Hind::{:yuk::sad:

Speedbird1014
22nd Nov 2010, 09:17
But the unknown is how on earth did these fakes get through airline certifications with so many exams, checks at ground level & in the air by airline certified check pilots, instructors & examiners into right hand seats?

DGCA is not the only one who is corrupt, but these so called airlines check pilots and examiners are also at the root of it. I personally know one guy flying for spicejet who could not even pass the dgca exams....

How did he get his license????
he paid 8 lakhs upfront for his exams.

How did he get the job???????
paid 22 lakhs upfront to some guy who deals with these kind of things....

Its a very sad scenario out there airlines are continuously hiring these jacka**es (especially spicejet), no exams, no checks, no interviews, pay and get in, for these guys, while at the same time many of MUCH BETTER pilots are unemployed, why, simply because they cant pay, all their emails to airlines goes un replied.

Airlines are getting the first officers required for them and many of them would probably kill everyone on board if just given the opportunity to land themselves.......

Since we have no public recruitments for first officers since the last jet airways assessment and even before that, all the new pilots are going in through this way only.....

Its simple airlines does not care if anyone in the cockpit knows how to fly or not, as long as they are meeting legal requirements and pay them to get there.....
:mad::confused:

pree56
22nd Nov 2010, 10:13
Since we have no public recruitments for first officers since the last jet airways assessment and even before that, all the new pilots are going in through this way only.....

hahahaha ... that was the biggest f#cking EYEWASH assessment conducted by jet airways.
all the cronies of commanders and seniors in jet airways along with some highly politically connected people were taken in.

Yes, THERE WERE A FEW GUYS N GALS without jugad who were taken in, but the number of such candidates was NEGLIGIBLE compared to the fraud candidates.
and these candidates were deliberately taken so that no one suspects of any fraud or favoritism/nepotism in their selection process.
In case there are some good guys like AGENT123 and Jimmygill who try to expose these fraud F#CKS, some demented members of pprune will always vehemently oppose their posts and throw daggers at him for trying to do witch hunts and being cynical.

how am I so bloody sure of what Im saying ?
Well ... my so called "good friend" just finished with his ground training in Chemtex for 737-NG and is off to London for simulator training !! :ugh::ugh:
How did he get into Jet Airways ?
Well, knowing a few big guys in NATIONALIST CONGRESS PARTY definitely did help !
Oh and by the way, this good friend of mine failed DGCA Navigation paper 4 times, till finally one day he hit the jackpot .. what was that jackpot ? His good old friend from high school whom he caught up with one day at a school reunion ... introduced him to his good friend who was in politics.
A few bundles of notes passed under the table ... and voila ! He clears all exams in the next attempt including the Indian RTR exams with the blessings of a Member of Parliament (Who himself became an MP with the blessings of NCP party leader:E).

and in case any of you are going to ask me .. sorry ... im not revealing any names here.
Afterall, the great PPRUNE is all about respecting the fraudsters and bashing up the whistle blowers.

JUST A WORD OF CAUTION TO THE INSTRUCTORS AND EXAMINERS WHO WILL BE COACHING AND "GENUINELY PASSING" THESE KIDS IN SIMS :

Please make sure your near and dear dont fly in flights flown by these corrupt kids. Mark my words, another Mangalore tradegy is around the corner. God Bless !

Speedbird1014
22nd Nov 2010, 11:43
that was the biggest f#cking EYEWASH assessment conducted by jet airways.
all the cronies of commanders and seniors in jet airways along with some highly politically connected people were taken in.

Jugaad of commanders...... no, I knew a commander very well i didn't get through.....

Jugaad of management and politicians....... Of course, I knew one guy i met there, got selected, his dad knew some politician....

it was definitely not fair and square, but atleast we got some hope rather than constant news of bull**** guys getting in without any assessment.....

And as u mentioned, yes there are tons of these kind of guys out there, who has political contacts and end up in the cockpit of an airliner without even PASSING AN EXAM.:eek:

Please make sure your near and dear dont fly in flights flown by these corrupt kids. Mark my words, another Mangalore tradegy is around the corner. God Bless !

Absolutely true.....

jahaj_crash
24th Nov 2010, 11:24
I can vouch for another two. Not a single person in aviation leave alone Jet Airways in the whole God damn radius of 50-60KM. We Made it.... i expect about 10% selections would have been fixed. Rest were on merit. Maybe knowing someone here & there could be a coincidence :)

duyentranvan
26th Nov 2010, 01:54
this clearly shows the standards they really have in india.. probably atc had only 6 hrs on flight simulator 2007 and they got a job there too.

jackx123
26th Nov 2010, 02:58
this one got caught. how many are there still to catch. it's the same as through customs (almost). they only catch 5% of smugglers.

airflirt
30th Nov 2010, 03:28
it is fair to say that many of these kids could have had no choice but to go along with the instructors. it will be unfair to pin all blame on them.
does dgca not do periodic audits and checks on flying schools?
why is it then that this scam should surface after all these years.
while i am sure it is criminal offense to put lives at risk like this,
the moot question is " will the regulatory authority be accountable for this lapse".

av8r76
30th Nov 2010, 07:23
Therein lies the primary reason why the Indian skies are inherently dangerous. How can the regulator ensure transparency and honesty when the regulator itself inculcates and propogates cloak and dagger behaviour which undermines the progress of aviation in India?

Right from ATC ( AAI's refusal to turn ATC services into a separate professional entity) to licensing (well documented on pprune) to airspace restrictions (IAF's refusal to release airspace to make routes efficient) to investment (low FDI caps restricting professional and competent management expertise) to archaic FDTL regs (VOML anyone?) to ridiculous exams and testing procedures and policies (again, well documented on pprune).... the list goes on and on.

Do not expect any improvement in our lot in the near.. well, distant future. We will eventually get to a level resembling global standards, and that will be only be out of compulsion or else we will get left behind (look what the FAA almost did to us last year).