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IndiGo bars man who hit a co-passenger on plane flying from Mumbai to Kolkata from its flights

IndiGo bars man who hit a co-passenger on plane flying from Mumbai to Kolkata from its flights

Time of India5 days ago
NEW DELHI:
IndiGo
has barred a passenger who had assaulted a co-flyer on an aircraft headed from Mumbai to Kolkata Friday, from all its flights indefinitely. "Following due diligence, the incident involving an unruly customer has been formally reported to the relevant authorities for necessary action.
In line with our commitment to discourage such unruly behaviour onboard flights, the individual has been suspended from flying on any IndiGo flights, in accordance with regulatory provisions," IndiGo said Saturday.
Now it is upto other Indian airlines whether they also decide on doing the same with the accused till the due legal process of putting him on the national no fly list is taken. Before this provision for unruly flyers was in place, state-owned Air India, under its then CMD Ashwani Lohani had about a decade back had barred at least two people, including an MP, from its flights.
At that time, other airlines had also decided to do the same for these people.
The no fly list in India was enacted after these instances.
IndiGo had initiated
legal action
against the unruly flyer on Saturday itself after the aircraft landed in Kolkata. So apart from being put on no fly list, there is likely to be other action too against the assaulter.
The Bidhannagar Police said on X: "On Aug 1, 2025, a complaint was received from IndiGo regarding two Indian male passengers who were travelling on flight 6E-138 from Mumbai to Kolkata.
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During the flight, a heated altercation ensued between the two, following which Hafijul Rahaman slapped the other, Hossain Ahmed Majumder). Passenger declared unruly by the cabin crew of Indigo and handed over to Police. Legal action has been initiated.
"
The unruly passenger hit a co-traveller who had a panic attack on an IndiGo Mumbai-Kolkata flight Friday. The assaulter was handed over to security agencies by the airline.
The victim had suffered a panic attack when the aircraft was taxiing in Mumbai. He started sobbing and walking in the aisle, requesting to be allowed to alight from the plane. At this time a passenger is seen slapping this person as he was passing by his seat in videos of the assault that went viral on social media.
All other passengers and airline crew immediately came to the victim's support. 'He was comforted and seated.
The aircraft then took off for its destination and had an uneventful flight,' said people in the know.
"At IndiGo, the safety and well-being of our customers and crew remain our foremost priority. We remain committed to fostering a safe, respectful, and comfortable environment for all onboard," IndiGo said on X Saturday while announcing its decision to put the assaulter on its no fly list.
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Mahadev, Malegaon, And India's Final War Against Terror
Mahadev, Malegaon, And India's Final War Against Terror

News18

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  • News18

Mahadev, Malegaon, And India's Final War Against Terror

In July 2025, Indian Army killed Pahalgam attack mastermind; UNSC linked TRF to LeT; NIA court acquitted Col Purohit, Sadhvi Pragya in Malegaon case. The last week of July 2025 has seen three significant developments in the world of counterterrorism. In Kashmir, the Indian army neutralised three Pakistani terrorists, including Suleiman Hashim Musa, the mastermind behind the Pahalgam attack. In a parallel development, a UNSC report explicitly stated that the TRF could not have executed the Pahalgam terror attack without support from LeT. The third and most sensitive development was the NIA court's acquittal of Col Purohit, Sadhvi Pragya, and Kulkarni in the Malegaon blast case, following years of torture, harassment, and humiliation in a fabricated, politically motivated, and botched-up investigation. In the past four decades, cross-border terrorism has been at the core of India's security challenges. It began with Khalistan and Kashmir terrorism in the late 70s. At that time, India, complacent about its superiority over Pakistan in conventional warfare, confronted terrorism in Punjab, Kashmir, and the North East. Over these four decades, India has faced the worst and most brutal forms of terrorism, including abductions, hijackings, massacres, minority killings, murders, IED attacks, suicide bombings, and fidayeen attacks. The horrors of Chattisinghpora, Nandimarg, the Parliament attack, bomb blasts in Mumbai, Jaipur, Delhi, Bangalore, and Coimbatore, the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, the Pulwama Fidayeen attack, and the recent Pahalgam attack have bruised India's morale, communal harmony, and stability multiple times. However, India never succumbed to terrorists. It always demonstrated a firm resolve in its fight against terror, even when the West, preoccupied with the spectre of communism, ignored the expansion of Jihadism globally. Left without allies in 1990 after the Soviet Union's disintegration and a collapsing economy, India faced deadly terrorist movements in Kashmir, Punjab, and the North-East. Pakistan, the primary supporter of cross-border terrorism in India, was favoured by the West. In the 1980s, GHQ Rawalpindi carried out covert operations for the CIA. ISI veterans like Col Imam and Gen Hamid Gul trained Deobandi jihadists from Afghanistan and Pakistan for a prolonged proxy war in Afghanistan. In return, Washington provided Pakistan with billions of dollars in aid and military support, which Pakistan diverted to finance terrorist activities in J&K. Fueled by drug money and US backing, Pakistan pursued nuclear ambitions. By the early 1990s, Pakistan was fast closing the nuclear gap with India. India was in a difficult position. With the rise of the Taliban, India lost Afghanistan, another key neighbour and ally. Strategically, Afghanistan's loss was a major setback to India's national security. Under the overarching Pakistani umbrella, the jihadist takeover of Pakistan led to the emergence of numerous terrorist groups, terror training camps, drug smuggling networks, infiltration routes, crime syndicates, and illegal weapons markets. Consequently, an array of transnational Deobandi and Wahhabi terror groups like Harkat-ul-Mujahiddin, Harkat-ul-Ansar, Harkat-ul-Jihad-ul-Islami (HuGI), Lashkar-e-Toiba, Al Badr, and Hizbul Mujahiddin made Kashmir the epicentre of terrorist activities. After Pakistan's successful nuclear tests in 1998, its audacity knew no bounds, unleashing more lethal groups like Jaish-e-Mohammad. India's cautious, measured, moderate, and proportionate military response, combined with diplomatic efforts aimed at peaceful resolution, demonstrated patience and strategic restraint. India's restraint and patience stemmed from practical geopolitical considerations and moral and civilisational values, as reflected in the Ramayana and Mahabharata, where Lord Rama and Krishna sought peace until the very end, even at personal sacrifice. However, India faced the embarrassment of releasing Masood Azhar in exchange for freeing 150 passengers of IC-814. After a series of ISI-orchestrated bomb blasts in Mumbai, Jaipur, Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Coimbatore, Hyderabad, and other cities, India was helpless. ISI's covert capabilities emboldened indigenous jihadist groups like SIMI and IM, who developed close ties with them. Following the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, the then government chose not to retaliate, leaving the average Indian feeling humiliated and betrayed. However, after Modi's rise to power, India broke the shackles and began regaining lost ground on national security. Modi started with a bang. 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For the first time, the Indian government responded with a holistic, bold, and courageous approach, not only against gun-toting terrorists but also against internal subversionists who weakened India's foundations from within as journalists, academics, administrators, engineers, etc. Once again, Pakistan responded with the deadly fidayeen attack in Pulwama, killing 40 Indian soldiers. For the first time, Indian fighter jets flew deep inside Pakistani territory and retaliated with air strikes on Balakot, neutralising 300 Jaish terrorists. The message was clear – India will not succumb to nuclear blackmail and will hit hard inside enemy territory. Continuing its fight against terror, India abrogated Article 370 in 2019, a historic move that still amazes us – ordinary citizens had lost faith in the Indian state's ability to carry out such a measure until Modi removed it. After the Kashmir move, New Delhi invested heavily in development and tourism in Kashmir. 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This time, India launched Operation Sindoor at a scale much higher than the Balakot air strikes and Uri surgical strikes. India destroyed nine terror camps in Pakistan, rained Brahmos missiles, destroyed Pakistan's air-defences, and rendered it vulnerable to full-scale invasion with ground troops. In a daring and unconventional move, India attacked the Nur Khan air base, reportedly a storehouse of Pakistani nuclear assets. An Indian missile attack on its entrance killed 300 people, including soldiers and scientists, inside the underground silo. Initially, India responded moderately, destroying only terror camps. However, Pakistan opened the front along the entire western border with India. Turkish drones, Chinese missiles, and air defences proved ineffective against Indian might. Momentarily, it seemed India was on its way to conquer PoK and move ground forces. 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The state machinery was infiltrated by Islamists and pro-Pakistan elements, with Bollywood working for the underworld mafia in Pakistan, aiding jihadists. Politicians contested elections with fake currency printed in Pakistan, and liberal intellectuals and academics attended conferences and parties of jihadi extremists and ISI spies like Fai in the US. Over the last 14 years, the state has changed dramatically. Today, anyone defending Rohingya settlers and Jihadists in the name of human rights finds little support across the ideological spectrum. Even opposition parties must think twice before undertaking such a suicidal venture. top videos View all As we move forward, it is clear that any future Pahalgam-like terror attack will likely lead to significant cartographic changes in South Asia. However, beyond Kashmir, India faces a major war against Jihadism in its hinterland. Due to polarised social and political discourse, bitter communal tensions, widespread jihadist activities, and Muslim radicalisation, every city sits on a ticking time bomb. Any spark could ignite major civil unrest and communal rioting. India's intelligence and kinetic capabilities require a massive overhaul and upgrade. Sooner or later, we must confront the jihadist juggernaut, which is comprehensive and multifaceted. Additionally, the state must consider its covert links with Pakistan and Bangladesh-based jihadist entities and global jihadist organisations. Before the jihadist machinery makes a final effort to transform India into an Islamist nation by 2047, as the PFI document stated, the state must act systematically, long-term, and determinedly. The author is a policy analyst specialising in counterterrorism, Indian foreign policy and Afghanistan-Pakistan geopolitics. He has done his PhD on Jaish-e-Mohammad. Views expressed in the above piece are personal and solely those of the author. They do not necessarily reflect News18's views. tags : Malegaon blast Pahalgam attack TRF UNSC view comments Location : New Delhi, India, India First Published: August 07, 2025, 15:40 IST News opinion Opinion | Mahadev, Malegaon, And India's Final War Against Terror Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

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timean hour ago

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Dharmasthala mass burial probe: 7 FIRs registered after clash near site; YouTubers among complainants

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