LET THE FLIGHTS BEGIN
It has been more than three months since Indian Airlines suspended its flights to Kathmandu at the insistence of the Indian government, and the recent failure of bilateral talks regarding security arrangements at Kathmandu's Tribhuvan International Airport means that the resumption of flights is still in limbo. Meanwhile, Nepal's India-dependent summer tourism has been gravely affected, and Indian Airlines itself loses INR 25.5 lakh a day as a result of the suspensions.
The calling off of flights to Kathmandu from New Delhi, Varanasi and Calcutta, was decreed even as the hijacked Airbus 310 was circling Amritsar in the very first leg of the extended episode. It was a novel tool of regional diplomacy, this punitive banning of flights to a neighbouring country. India's response to a very real security lapse at the Tribhuvan International Airport was a singular sanction that is both unprecedented and extravagant.