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Delhi High Court Rejects IndiGo’s Appeal Against Terminal Shift

The airport regulator shall in another week decide when the airlines have to shift their operations.

IndiGo Logo sits on one of its flight at an airport in Bengaluru, India. (Photographer: Anirudh Saligrama/BloombergQuint) 
IndiGo Logo sits on one of its flight at an airport in Bengaluru, India. (Photographer: Anirudh Saligrama/BloombergQuint) 

The Delhi High Court today upheld its single judge order accepting DIAL's decision to partially shift Indigo and SpiceJet operations from IGI airport's terminal T-1 to T-2.

A bench of Justices Hima Kohli and Rekha Palli, however, directed IndiGo and SpiceJet to approach Delhi International Airport Ltd (DIAL) within one week. The airport regulator shall in another week decide when the airlines have to shift their operations.

The bench also said that if the airlines failed to approach DIAL, the airport regulator was free to send them a communication about shifting of their services.

The high court’s decision came on Indigo and SpiceJet’s plea challenging its single judge order of Dec. 20 last year, upholding DIAL's decision to shift the operations of private carriers Indigo partially, GoAir and SpiceJet from Terminal-1 (T-1) to Terminal-2 (T-2) at the IGI Airport.

On Oct. 21, DIAL had asked the three airlines to shift their flights to and from Delhi to Mumbai, Kolkata and Bengaluru to T-2 from January 4. All other flights of the carriers would continue to operate from T-1, the airport operator had said.

While upholding DIAL's decision, the single judge had given the airlines time till February 15 to shift their operations partially. GoAir shifted all its operations to T-2, saying partial shifting of its operations would 'kill' it as it was a smaller airline.