SHIVANI GUPTA WAS CHARGED FOR USE OF SPECIAL LIFT MEANT FOR BOARDING AIRCRAFT 
We had to hire an ambulift from the airport authority. Since they charged us 
for it, we had to recover the cost from the passenger JITENDRA BHARGAVA, Air 
India's director (communications)...............Neha Bhayana  Mumbai 

WHEN SHIVANI Gupta (38), a wheelchair-bound Delhi resident, took an Indian 
flight to Mumbai on June 16, she was not prepared for what lay ahead. 
Not only was she physically carried to her flight seat in Delhi, because there 
was no narrow wheelchair for the aircraft's aisle, she was also charged Rs 
1,685 for an ambulift, (a van with a special lift for the disabled) to board 
the return flight from Mumbai. 

Gupta, an activist for the rights of the physically challenged, filed a 
complaint against Indian, the Mumbai International Airport Limited and the 
Director General of Civil Aviation (DGCA). 

The Office of the Chief Commissioner for Persons with Disabilities, vested with 
powers of a civil court to hear complaints regarding the rights of the 
physically challenged, issued a show-cause notice to the authorities concerned. 

"I felt humiliated and helpless when I was carried by the staff. They were not 
trained to handle people with disabilities and I sustained bruises on my 
shoulders. I could not use the toilet because there was no aisle chair," said 
Gupta. 

An Indian spokesperson said: "We provided a free ambulift at Delhi airport 
because we have our own service there. But in Mumbai, we had to hire an 
ambulift from the airport authority. Since they charged us for it, we had to 
recover the cost from the passenger," said Jitendra Bhargava,Air India's 
director (communications). 

According to a May 1 directive from DGCA, charges may be levied for human 
assistance but the use of aids and appliances to access the aircraft are to be 
provided free to physically challenged passengers. The fact that Indian charged 
Gupta Rs 1,685 for the ambulift was in direct breach of this directive. 

Gupta had pointed out the directive to the airline staff. "But the staff told 
me that they had not received any written information about the new law," she 
said. 

Spokesperson for Mumbai International Airport Limited Manish Kalghatgi said: 
"Facilitation of passage to the aircraft is the responsibility of the airline, 
not us." 

When Bhargava was asked why a narrow wheelchair was not available for the 
aircraft's aisle, he said: "When passengers can't go up to their seats, they 
are escorted. Since the passenger has made a complaint, we will argue the case 
when the hearing takes place." 

URL:http://epaper.hindustantimes.com/artMailDisp.aspx?article=25_07_2008_003_013&typ=0&pub=264
 

URL:http://epaper.hindustantimes.com/artMailDisp.aspx?article=25_07_2008_004_003&typ=0&pub=264
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