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After the cancelation of their flight, Indigo passengers in Delhi airport protested by holding up signs. see the video

After the cancelation of their flight, Indigo passengers in Delhi airport protested by holding up signs. see the video


Protests resulted over the cancellation of the Delhi-Deoghar Indigo flight from Terminal 2 at the Delhi airport.


After their flight from Delhi to Deoghar was canceled at Terminal 2, passengers on the Indigo airline staged protests at the airport. When the cancelation was announced, the passengers became enraged and began yelling anti-Indigo Airline slogans in the airport's presence of security guards.


This is not the only complaint of this kind made against the airline; in the last few days, other such events have surfaced, and IndiGo Airline has also been fined by the aviation authority. Following a social media video of customers waiting outside the Mumbai airport runway after their aircraft was delayed, the DGCA fined the airport ₹90 lakh and IndiGo airline ₹1.2 crore last week. was seen eating in public.


According to an individual with knowledge of the issue, "Neither IndiGo nor Mumbai International Airport were proactive in anticipating the situation while making proper facilities for passengers at the airport."


Indigo raises the price for selecting a seat.

IndiGo Airlines had said earlier in the month that it would be raising the fees for choosing a seat in some classes.


When compared to the original range of ₹150 to ₹1500, the altered pricing structure, which now ranges from ₹150 to ₹2000, implies a 33% increase at the high end. Certain seats have been marked as "XL" by IndiGo, providing more legroom or, in the case of front row seats, facilitating a speedy disembarkation for customers.


Following IndiGo's decision to remove fuel costs from customers, which resulted in a roughly ₹1,000 reduction in the overall ticket price, there was a rise in seat selection fees. This action follows the decline in Aviation Turbine Fuel (ATF) costs.


IndiGo released a statement saying, "Since ATF prices are dynamic, we will continue to adjust our fares and its components to respond to any changes in prices or market conditions."


The first airline to charge for gasoline last year in an effort to offset increases in the price of ATF was IndiGo.

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