logo
British F-35B Royal jet wraps up 35-day Kerala stopover with rain, repairs, and a bill; here is a full timeline of events

British F-35B Royal jet wraps up 35-day Kerala stopover with rain, repairs, and a bill; here is a full timeline of events

Time of India6 hours ago
June 14: Emergency landing in Kerala
Live Events
June 15: Indian authorities confirm assistance
June 25: UK acknowledges ongoing repairs
June 27: Jet to be shifted for repairs
July 6: RAF technical team arrives
Mid-July: Memes & monsoon
July 21: Repairs complete, jet cleared for departure
Ongoing – The Parking Bill
(You can now subscribe to our
(You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel
A British F-35B Lightning II stealth fighter jet, part of the UK Royal Navy's Carrier Strike Group, made an unplanned month-long halt at Thiruvananthapuram International Airport in Kerala last month and is finally ready to take off to the homeland on Tuesday.What began as an emergency landing due to technical trouble ended in a diplomatic and logistical exercise — complete with tropical rains, memes, repair crews, and a hefty parking bill.Here's how the saga unfolded:The £85-million F-35B stealth jet developed a hydraulic fault mid-sortie about 100 nautical miles off the Kerala coast.With low fuel and worsening weather, the pilot was cleared for an emergency landing at Thiruvananthapuram airport, a designated emergency recovery airfield. The Indian Air Force (IAF) assisted in the landing and provided refuelling support, while CISF took over round-the-clock security.The IAF released a statement confirming its role in facilitating the safe landing and ensuring post-landing support.Royal Navy personnel aboard HMS Prince of Wales attempted initial on-site repairs, but the jet remained grounded.British authorities officially acknowledged repair efforts and expressed gratitude to Indian agencies for their support.With no resolution yet, the aircraft continued to remain parked in the open during Kerala's monsoon season.It was announced that the jet would be moved to a local maintenance, repair, and overhaul (MRO) facility.Indian officials had earlier suggested relocating it to a hangar due to heavy rainfall, though the UK initially declined.A 24-member expert team from the Royal Air Force — including 14 engineers and 10 support staff — arrived in Kerala with specialised equipment.The fighter jet was towed from the tarmac to Air India Engineering Services Ltd's hangar for repairs.As the F-35B sat idle under grey skies, it drew public attention and social media humour. Kerala Tourism joined the banter, posting a tongue-in-cheek message: 'Kerala, the destination you'll never want to leave.'Airport officials confirmed that repairs had been completed and the fighter jet was ready for takeoff.Final refuelling and logistics were being arranged for the scheduled July 22 departure.For its 35-day stay, the UK will reportedly be charged Rs 26,261 per day — totalling around Rs 9.19 lakh — for parking alone.Additional hangar usage charges from July 6 onwards will be levied by Air India Engineering Services.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Air India crew pleads with impatient passengers to remain seated as flight lands, video goes viral
Air India crew pleads with impatient passengers to remain seated as flight lands, video goes viral

Hindustan Times

time36 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

Air India crew pleads with impatient passengers to remain seated as flight lands, video goes viral

A video that shows Air India passengers ignoring safety instructions and moving inside the aircraft while it was still taxiing the runway has sparked a broader conversation about lack of inflight etiquette and unruly behaviour. The video was posted by an Instagram account called storychaplin that is on a mission to inculcate better civic sense in Indians. A video of Air India passengers ignoring safety instructions has sparked backlash (Representational image) Passengers ignore safety instructions According to the video caption, the undated video was filmed right after an Air India flight from Bangkok, Thailand had landed in Delhi. The seatbelt sign was still on, the cabin crew was still strapped into their seats, and the aircraft was still moving. However, several passengers stood up even while the plane was still taxiing the runway. One man not even stood up but even started walking down the aisle, completely ignoring the cabin crew's pleas to remain seated. 'Just landed in Delhi from Bangkok on an Air India flight. The plane was still moving, cabin crew was still strapped, and yet… passengers started standing, opening overhead bins, ignoring every single safety instruction,' read the caption. Flight attendants' pleas ignored 'Excuse me, remain seated. Ma'am the seatbelt sign is on,' a flight attendant was heard saying in the video. 'Sir, sir,' the attendant kept repeating as a man wearing an orange t-shirt moved from his window seat towards the aisle and started walking. The man ignored her repeated pleas as other passengers also began standing up. 'Excuse me. Remain seated please. Seatbelt sign is still on, please be seated,' the flight attendant repeated. The video was shared on Instagram with the caption, 'Why the world hates us' – referring to the hate that Indians tend to get abroad for lack of civic sense. 'Cabin crew kept pleading. People kept ignoring. This isn't a lack of awareness. It's a lack of basic civic sense,' the caption added. Passengers under fire The footage drew backlash from viewers who criticised the passengers for ignoring safety instructions and endangering fellow flyers. Moving in the aisle or opening overhead bins while the plane is taxiing is risky because sudden stops or turns can cause falls or injuries from falling luggage. It also violates safety regulations and can obstruct crew operations. The video has received more than 3,000 comments. 'There should be fine at every level.. then only people will fall in line,' wrote one person. 'They will stand for 10 mins in aisle to save 15 seconds and then wait at the belt for 30 mins with everyone else,' another noted. 'So embarrassing for us,' a user added. 'The same happened a few years ago in Malaysia flight.. when the airhostess announced everybody to be seated, ONLY indian passengers were not following ..it is indeed a shame,' a viewer said.

A city of birds: Delhi's first urban atlas completes a year
A city of birds: Delhi's first urban atlas completes a year

Time of India

time37 minutes ago

  • Time of India

A city of birds: Delhi's first urban atlas completes a year

Delhi Bird Atlas data is open and contributed to the eBird global platform 'It takes a flock to spot city's birds,' suggests Delhi Bird Atlas' presentation, mapping the one-year journey. From drains to wetlands, a year-long effort led by citizens is transforming how the capital sees its ecology. The Delhi Bird Atlas, a city-wide initiative to systematically document the capital's avifauna, marked the completion of its first full year this week, with a gathering of over 150 birders, forest officials, researchers, and NGOs at the WWF Auditorium, Lodhi Road. In just 12 months, the Atlas has mobilised over 200 volunteers, generated 1150 eBird checklists, and mapped more than 221 bird species across wetlands, ridge forests, drains, urban villages, slums, and high-rise colonies. The ecological transformation is powered not by high-tech labs or satellite imagery, but by binoculars, bird checklists and citizen resolve. 'The data is a testament to the commitment of the Delhi birding community' You Can Also Check: Delhi AQI | Weather in Delhi | Bank Holidays in Delhi | Public Holidays in Delhi Delivering the keynote address at the event, Shyam Sunder Kandpal, IFS, Delhi's Chief Wildlife Warden, called the Atlas "one of the most comprehensive citizen science efforts ever undertaken in an Indian city,' emphasising the Forest Department's commitment to support and scale the initiative in its second year. He added, 'Delhi Bird Atlas has our full support. This data will be important in the coming days and is a testament to the enthusiasm and commitment of Delhi birding community and citizens who deeply care about the biodiversity of the national capital. ' Jabestin A, IFS Conservator of Delhi Forests, said, 'I have been part of other bird atlases in India, but the Delhi Bird Atlas is unique as it has managed to cover 100 per cent of the subcells in the first year in itself. The dedication of the birders is visible in the outcome, and the Atlas is showing us how cities like Delhi can build powerful ecological datasets through local knowledge and collaborative design.' Unlike one-off bird counts, the Atlas follows a seasonal, grid-based methodology that enables researchers to track temporal trends, habitat-level changes, and migratory patterns with greater resolution. The data is open and contributed to the eBird global platform, making Delhi one of few megacities with a growing public dataset on urban birdlife. Delhi Bird Atlas in a citizen science initiative to map Delhi's avian diversity The event, titled Delhi Bird Atlas: Year One in Review – A Celebration of Citizen Science, featured: • Highlights from winter and summer surveys • A citizen science quiz with participation from first-time volunteers to seasoned ecologists • Visual displays of species trends and urban cluster data • Discussions on community-driven monitoring and atlas expansion into RWAs, schools, and ward-level planning This is field ecology, ground-up, happening in the middle of one of India's most important urban spaces Dr Akash Gulalia one of the senior birders. The event closed with a felicitation of core volunteers, team leads, and partners — including Bird Count India, Delhi Forest Department, WWF-India, Wildlife SOS, and Asian Adventures, with a promise to engage more volunteers in its second year. With its replicable format, low-cost implementation, and strong local ownership, the Delhi Bird Atlas now stands as a living model for urban biodiversity monitoring in India. Supported by organisations including Delhi Forest Department, Bird Count India, WWF-India, delhibird Foundation, Dial (Delhi International Airport Limited), Asian Adventures, Wildlife SOS, and other conservation partners, the Delhi Bird Atlas promises to be a landmark initiative for the city. Pankaj Gupta, a seasoned birder, who is leading the DBA, took the gathering through the process by which Delhi Bird Atlas, a citizen science initiative aimed at systematically documenting the bird diversity of Delhi, works. The cluster leads and volunteers map habitats through regular, structured surveys and standardised data collection. Conducted across a grid-based mapping system, the Atlas seeks to generate robust, long-term datasets that help monitor population trends, habitat usage, and species distribution. Organised by a collaboration of birdwatchers, researchers and conservation organisations and the government, the atlas project also aims to promote awareness about urban biodiversity and contribute valuable insights for conservation planning and ecological management in the Delhi region.

Watch: British F-35 jet finally takes off from Kerala after 5 weeks
Watch: British F-35 jet finally takes off from Kerala after 5 weeks

Business Standard

time40 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

Watch: British F-35 jet finally takes off from Kerala after 5 weeks

The British Royal Navy's F-35 fighter jet, which made an emergency landing at Thiruvananthapuram International Airport on June 14, successfully took off from the airport on Tuesday, ending a five-week technical halt. The fifth-generation stealth fighter — one of the world's most advanced combat aircraft and valued at approximately $115 million — had been grounded due to a technical snag. It was on a routine sortie over the Arabian Sea when it encountered adverse weather and was unable to return to the Royal Navy's flagship aircraft carrier, HMS Prince of Wales. IAF confirms routine diversion protocol The Indian Air Force (IAF) said the diversion was routine and coordinated. It confirmed that the UK fighter jet's movement was fully informed and cleared for flight safety reasons. Upon the emergency diversion call, the F-35B was detected by the IAF's integrated air command and control system network and cleared for landing. Part of Operation Highmast naval exercises The emergency landing occurred days after HMS Prince of Wales took part in a joint naval exercise with the Indian Navy in the Arabian Sea on June 9–10. The aircraft carrier is leading the UK Carrier Strike Group's eight-month deployment to the Indo-Pacific under Operation Highmast. According to the IAF, the diversion and landing in Kerala were carried out under the pre-established 'diversion contingency plans' between the British and Indian armed forces for the operation. Jet repaired, housed in Air India hangar Following the safe landing, British aviation engineers were flown in to carry out necessary repairs. During its extended stay, the F-35B was housed in an Air India hangar at the Thiruvananthapuram airport. The UK reportedly paid landing fees, daily parking charges, and hangar rent during this period.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store