Air india urination case

  1. Air India urination case: 'Accused trying to spread misinformation,' says complainant
  2. Air India Urination Case: What Is Wrong With People's Behaviour?
  3. Air India 'pee
  4. Air India urination case: How Delhi Police caught the accused Shankar Mishra
  5. Man at the centre of Air India row held
  6. Shankar Mishra, Air India Urination Case: "Buck Stops With Pilot": Co
  7. Air India urination case: Delhi Court sends Shankar Mishra to 14 days judicial custody
  8. Air India urinating incident: ‘Shankar Mishra got lady’s clothes cleaned, paid compensation’


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Air India urination case: 'Accused trying to spread misinformation,' says complainant

NEW DELHI: The complainant in the Air India "urination" case has rubbished claims made by the accused Shankar Mishra, saying it is being done with the intent to spread misinformation and further harassment. Mishra is accused of urinating on the complainant, a co-passenger on the Air India New York-Delhi flight on November 26, in an inebriated condition. He has been arrested and is currently in judicial custody. Air India urination case: I did not pee on woman, accused Shankar Mishra tells court Shankar Mishra, accused of urinating on a woman passenger on an Air India flight from New York to Delhi, on Friday rejected the charges in a Delhi court and claimed that the woman had peed on herself. He is presently in judicial custody. "I did not urinate on complainant. The complainant woman's On Friday during the hearing, the accused through his counsel submitted, "The complainant woman's seat was blocked. It wasn't possible for him (Mishra) to go there. The woman has a problem of incontinence. She urinated on herself. She is a Kathak dancer, 80 per cent of Kathak dancers have this issue." The counsel even questioned the probe being carried out by Delhi Police. Air India peeing incident: We fell short, response should have been swifter, says Tata chairman Reacting to the incident of an unruly passenger urinating on another flyer on an Air India flight, Tata Sons chairman N Chandrasekaran said the company's response should have been much swifter. "The allegations are completely fa...

Air India Urination Case: What Is Wrong With People's Behaviour?

• • • • A drunk man urinated on a female co-passenger in the business class of an Air India flight in November 2022 and was excused without facing any penalties. A few weeks after the incident, Air India filed a case and recommended that the disorderly passenger be placed on the no-fly list. The incident was revealed after the woman wrote to the group’s chairman, N. Chandrasekaran. The Directorate General of Civil Aviation has requested a report from the airline about the incident. The National Commission for Women has sought a detailed report from the Delhi Police Commissioner within seven days. Air India Urination Case On November 26, the drunk passenger, supposedly in his 30s, had walked up to the 70-year-old woman co-passenger, unzipped his pants, and urinated on her. He continued to expose himself until another passenger asked him to return to his seat. The incident happened on an Air India has filed a police complaint against the man. According to sources, the man has been put on the no-fly list by an internal committee constituted by Air India. Currently, the issue is awaiting a decision from a government committee. The National Commission for Women (NCW)took cognisance of the incident onboard an Air India New York-Delhi flight on 4 January. As per the latest On December 16, a video of an altercation between a passenger and an On December 27, an Indian passenger refused to straighten his reclined seat before take-off. This led to an argument between him and a flight...

Air India 'pee

Air India, which was once the Maharaja of the Skies, saw its reputation take a big hit due to the horrific incident wherein a male passenger exposed himself and urinated on a 70-year-old female passenger on the Air India New York-Delhi flight. Ever since the incident has come to light, and now with the Delhi police identifying the male culprit, social media has been abuzz with outrage over not just the incident but also the way Air India, now owned by the Tatas, handled it. Netizens have taken to social media to demand an immediate arrest of the culprit, pointing out also how the 30-day ban put on the passenger by Air India was not enough. IAS officer Ashok Khemka tweeted said that the 30-day ban seems to be an extremely soft treatment of a disgusting act and also questioned the US-based multinational financial services company Wells Fargo for its silence over the incident. — Ashok Khemka (@AshokKhemka_IAS) Another user named Satvik Sethi said imposing a 30-day ban on the male passenger is an insult to injury. Sethi tweeted, "Air India is a joke. A man urinated on a woman on the flight and they did nothing. Imposing a 30-day ban is insult to injury. This is a case of public indecency, assault, and sexual harassment. There needs to be stricter punishment, this is a criminal activity. Name and shame him." Sethi further stated that he is a platinum member of both Air India and Air Vistara and will stop using these airlines unless there is proper justice. Air India is a jo...

Air India urination case: How Delhi Police caught the accused Shankar Mishra

Delhi Police on January 07 arrested Shankar Mishra from Bengaluru, the Mumbai resident, who had allegedly urinated on a co-passenger onboard an Air India flight between New York and Delhi. Mishra who allegedly in an inebriated condition, urinated on his co-passenger has been arrested from Bengaluru and brought to Delhi, police said.

Man at the centre of Air India row held

The Delhi Police on Saturday arrested Shankar Mishra, 34, the Mr. Mishra was arrested in Bengaluru after the Delhi Police formed four teams and deployed them across three cities. He was later brought to Delhi. While the police sought further extension of his custody, a Delhi court on Sunday sent him to 14 days judicial custody. Also read: He told the police during his interrogation that he did not remember anything about the incident as he had “blacked out” during the flight. Mr. Mishra’s versions to the police have been changing. At first he agreed that he was inebriated, but later denied it. He also said that he had been too tired when he boarded the flight and only vaguely remembered whatever had happened during the journey, a police source told The Hindu. The developments unfolded on a day when Air India CEO Campbell Wilson finally issued a statement, four days after the incident came to the fore. There have been questions over the callous response of the airline, which did not report the man to the security forces after the flight from New York landed in Delhi on November 27, file an FIR, issue a warning to the passenger, or restrain him during the flight. “We regret and are pained about these experiences. Air India acknowledges that it could have handled these matters better, both in the air and on the ground, and is committed to taking action,” Mr. Wilson said. The CEO also announced that the airline had served show cause notices to four cabin crew and a pilot, and ...

Shankar Mishra, Air India Urination Case: "Buck Stops With Pilot": Co

New York: It was triggering to hear the father of an inebriated man who urinated on a female passenger in an Air India flight claim that the incident did not happen, a co-passenger has said, as he noted that the accused was incoherent, and blamed the pilot for the inaction in dealing with the situation. Dr Sugata Bhattacharjee, a US-based renowned Doctor of Audiology, was seated next to Shankar Mishra, who allegedly urinated on a woman co-passenger during the November 26 Air India flight from New York to New Delhi. "I would not have been this vocal. I waited, but when his father said this did not happen, it triggered me," Mr Bhattacharjee told PTI in an interview over the phone. Mishra's father had said in Boisar near Mumbai last week that his son is innocent and that he cannot do such a thing to a woman his mother's age. Delhi Police arrested Mishra, 34, from Bengaluru after he was traced to that city through technical surveillance. He has been sent to judicial remand for 14 days by a Delhi Court, which rejected a plea by police for his custody. Mr Bhattacharjee sat in seat number 8A, while Mishra was in seat 8C in the business class. He said that the law will take its own course, and did not comment on the ongoing investigation. Mr Bhattacharjee in a handwritten complaint to the airlines had stated that the distressed passenger was made to go back to her soiled seat despite four seats in the first class being vacant. He said that his "complaint was that they did not foll...

Air India urination case: Delhi Court sends Shankar Mishra to 14 days judicial custody

“Wells Fargo holds employees to the highest standards of professional and personal behaviour and we find these allegations deeply disturbing. This individual has been terminated from Wells Fargo. We are cooperating with law enforcement and ask that any additional inquiries be directed to them,” the company said in a statement.

Air India urinating incident: ‘Shankar Mishra got lady’s clothes cleaned, paid compensation’

The woman who complained about a male co-passenger urinating on her on board AI 102 of November 26, 2022, had told the Air India flight crew that she did not want to see the perpetrator's face. The lady claimed the offender had "started crying and profusely apologising" when he was brought infront of her.