A Bangkok-bound chartered US plane carrying American marines among 205 passengers, which was ordered by authorities to land at Mumbai airport for flying over Indian airspace without getting mandatory military clearance, took off on Monday after being grounded for over 33 hours. The aircraft was ordered to land in Mumbai on Sunday after it entered Indian airspace without the permission.
"The necessary regulatory permissions have been worked out," a Mumbai Air Traffic Control official told PTI. The issue relating to payment of navigational charges has also been sorted out, the official said. The ATC had earlier rejected the payment for navigational charges by credit card. The US military chartered Boeing 767 plane, belonging to North American Airlines, was on way from Fujiriah in the United Arab Emirates to Utapao in Bangkok. It landed at Mumbai airport at 0752 hours on Sunday and was parked at a remote bay. The aircraft was made to land in Mumbai while flying over Indian airspace as there was some confusion about its callsign.
The transport aircraft had "civilian clearance from Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) to fly over Indian airspace," IAF spokesperson Wing Commander T K Singha had said. "However, it was carrying military personnel, for which the aircraft should have obtained Air Operation Routing clearance (AOR), needed for a military aircraft," he said. Foreign military aircraft have to obtain two sets of clearances before flying over India.
Once the aircraft entered Indian air space, the IAF ordered it through radio communication to land in Mumbai, to which it complied with, Singha said. The aircraft did not take off on Sunday as the pilot had crossed his flying duty hours. The US embassy said, "We were pleased that we were able to resolve the procedural matter
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