The Delhi High Court’s directive to IndiGo to file a detailed affidavit on refunds and compensation goes beyond one airline or one episode of disruption. It raises a larger question about passenger rights in India’s rapidly expanding aviation sector, where operational scale has grown faster than accountability. When thousands of travellers are stranded, a simple refund may address the ticket price but not the hardship, uncertainty and cascading losses faced by passengers.December’s flight chaos exposed the fragility of airline contingency planning during peak travel periods. Delays and cancellations are sometimes unavoidable, but the absence of a transparent, standardised compensation framework leaves passengers at the mercy of airline discretion. Vouchers and refunds, while welcome, cannot substitute for a clearly defined obligation that reflects the inconvenience and distress caused.
By seeking clarity on compensation beyond refunds, the court has sent a timely signal to the aviation industry. Consumer trust depends not just on affordable fares and market dominance, but on fair treatment when things go wrong. The affidavit sought by the court could well become a benchmark, nudging airlines and regulators towards stronger passenger protection norms in the future.
