Nepal Airlines' jet remained on the ground, and more than 500 passengers
suffered as a result of the last-minute cancellation.
The
incident raised questions about whether the regulator had the authority to tell
airlines what to do so it could promote another airport.
Industry experts and Tourism Ministry officials said it was "illegal"
to force airlines to serve particular airports, and that it was a display of
the regulator's hegemony.
The
Civil Aviation Authority performs dual functions as regulator and service provider.
As service provider, it runs two international airports—
“If
the regulator tells airlines they have to operate flights from its other airports,
it is a total conflict of interest to promote business, not safety,” said
Sanjiv Gautam, former director general of the Civil Aviation Authority. “The
October 30 incident is really serious.”
Several
unnamed experts told the Post that the civil aviation body has been misusing
its authority but no one wants to speak against it for fear of retaliation.
“How
can a regulator force airlines to 'go here and there' to fulfil its interest to
promote business?”
International
airlines have been given a mid-December deadline to move some of their flights
to Bhairahawa.
Global aviation watchdogs have questioned the civil aviation
body’s dual role and urged
On
Thursday, the European
Commission continued its ban on Nepali airlines for not meeting
international safety standards. They remain on the updated EU Air Safety List
which means they are still barred from EU skies even after nearly 10 years.
According
to the Official
Journal of the European Union published on Thursday, the
European Commission has said, “As part of its continuous monitoring activities,
on September 14, 2022, the commission met with the representatives of the Civil
Aviation Authority of Nepal (CAAN). On that occasion, the CAAN provided the
commission with information regarding the safety oversight in
This means the Civil Aviation Authority of Nepal has communicated it will not
be fragmented into regulator and service provider.
Nepali
experts say the civil aviation body has offered no strong logic why it doesn’t
want this functional separation.
The
European Commission added in its report, “As a follow-up to that meeting, on
November 10, 2022, the CAAN submitted to the commission the information and
documentary evidence about the adoption of a new CAAN regulation, which in
CAAN’s view ensures the functional separation of CAAN’s regulatory and service
provider roles, namely by preventing the transfer of staff between regulatory
and service provider sections of the CAAN.”
The
report states, “The implementation of this new regulation and progress in
aligning the CAAN’s safety oversight with the relevant international safety
standards would allow the commission to consider whether a European Union
on-site assessment visit to
Following
the September 2012 crash of Sita Air Flight 601 at the
The
European Commission has said at this time there are no grounds for amending the
list of air carriers which are subject to an operating ban within the Union
with respect to air carriers from
“Member states should continue verifying the
effective compliance of air carriers certified in
The chief of the civil aviation body Pradip Adhikari has been
repeatedly saying to Nepali media that they will work from two offices instead
of splitting the organisation.
Insiders
say there is larger politics to prevent the organisation from being separated.
They say that once it is broken up, some top position holders will lose the
dual benefits they have been enjoying.
The
existing system allows the director general of the Civil Aviation Authority to
issue tenders for multi-billion-dollar projects. The same person also has the
plum job of overseeing compliance with the project and the aviation regulations
governing the issuance of licences to airlines and crews.
“No
one wants to lose this scope and power. That’s why, despite intense pressure,
it has become hard to separate the civil aviation body for a long time,”
insiders say.
“It’s
a shame that
The
Civil Aviation Authority has been repeatedly issuing assurances that the
European Commission will remove
There
are eight critical elements that ICAO considers essential for a state to establish,
implement and maintain in order to have an effective safety oversight system.
But
ICAO’s final audit report, a copy of which the Post has obtained, shows that
The effective
implementation score on organisation, one of the eight critical
elements, has been reduced to 45.45 percent from the earlier 50 percent. The
global average is 71.1 percent.
In
its final audit report, United Nations aviation watchdog ICAO formally asked
Nepal to split the civil aviation body into two entities—service provider and
regulator.
"The
request has come in written form after
Splitting
the organisation is a crucial organisational reform agenda which has been a work
in progress for the last one and a half decades.
“The
reluctance to listen to the aviation watchdogs will cost
"
Travel
and tour operators say that the travel insurance premium of tourists visiting
This
will hasten Nepal’s removal from its air safety list, allowing Nepali airlines
to fly to Europe and bring more tourists, but the government is unwilling to
break up the aviation agency and loosen its grip on it, insiders say.
Nepal’s
tourism and aviation sectors lamented that Parliament’s five-year term ended on
September 18 without passing long-pending civil aviation bills to separate the
civil aviation body, which could severely impede their growth and do long-term
damage.
Insiders
say the hospitality industry has been pouring billions into new properties amid
post-Covid optimism that tourist arrivals would take off, but failure to pass
the bills could stop recovery in its tracks.
Successive
tourism ministers and political leaders have been constantly pledging to the
diplomatic community that Nepal will pass the bills and start the process to
have the country removed from the bad books of the European Commission.
The
Post unsuccessfully made repeated attempts to contact officials at the Civil
Aviation Authority of Nepal for their reaction.
sangam prasain
kathmandupost
0 Comments