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    The Week

    The airline passengers forced to pay $31,000 extra for fuel

    Fliers jetting from India to England are asked to cough up hundred of dollars apiece when the plane stops for gas in Austria

    Air travelers have been forced in recent years to pay extra for everything from pillows to leg room to assigned seats. Now, two charter flights from India to England have taken things to a new low. Twice in the last week, Comtel Airline customers have been forced to cough up cash to pay for fuel and landing fees. In one instance, a flight from India to England stopped in Austria, where it was stranded until travelers raised $31,000, supposedly for fuel. Here, a brief guide:

    Passengers were asked to chip in for gas money?
    Yep. On Tuesday, a flight by charter airline Comtel took off from Amritsar, India, and was headed for Birmingham, England. On a fuel stop in Vienna, Austria, passengers (there were about 180 on the flight) were asked to pitch in about $200 a piece to raise $31,000, supposedly to cover fuel costs and other fees. "We need some money to pay the fuel, to pay the airport, to pay everything we need. If you want to go to Birmingham, you have to pay," a cabin crew member reportedly told passengers.

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    And people really paid?
    They sure did. "It was as if we'd been held hostage against our wills" and "held to ransom," says Lal Dadrah, a passenger on the plane. Fliers were allowed off the plane to hit the ATM, and the ordeal took nearly seven hours. The flight eventually reached Birmingham — with many angry passengers on board.

    And there was a second incident?
    On Thursday, Comtel again asked passengers on this route to contribute money. This time, the airline asked passengers for about $200 each before the plane would even take off from India. The flight was ultimately canceled, leaving nearly 200 people stranded.

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    Why is Comtel demanding this money?
    Comtel, a charter company based in Austria, says that Skyjet, a British firm that sold tickets for the flights, suddenly went out of business and never delivered this money to Comtel. But Mint Lineas Aviation, the Spanish company that owns the aircraft and supplies the crew, put the blame on Comtel, saying the company wasn't paying its bills and also owed money to the airport authority in India.

    What now?
    On Thursday, Mint said it would stop working with Comtel because of "unresolved financial questions." The British Civil Aviation Authority has stepped in to make sure travelers make it home on other airlines. Comtel's flights have been canceled for the weekend, though Bhupinder Kandra, the charter airline's majority shareholder, insists the company has not run out of money and that the "show will go on."

    Sources: BBC, CNN, USA Today

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    • Roland Broach  •  Omaha, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Sounds like kidnapping and extortion to me.
    • Steve J  •  Burlington, United States  •  6 mths ago
      So if passengers are being forced to pay extra for fuel, what exactly is the cost of the ticket supposed to cover? Just for the "right" to sit in a crowded, uncomfortable jet for several hours?
    • craig  •  Pleasanton, United States  •  6 mths ago
      since the airlines were deregulated some 30 years ago, they have turned to unmitigated crap.
      • Richard Steiner 6 mths ago
        They have to. Airlines are businesses, the bottom line needs to be met, and when passengers only care about price, that's the only factor that matters.

        Blame yourselves for choosing an airline based on price.
      • Joe 6 mths ago
        Richard: the airline sold tickets. That's a form of contract, and their actions were a breach of that contract. Not to mention the possibility of kidnapping and extortion charges that might apply.
      • NaceySpate 6 mths ago
        yeah, bottom line, they are lucky there were no one from the UN security council was on board or that mother would have been swarming with NATO troops.
    • Joe  •  6 mths ago
      And American jobs compete with India!!!
    • A Yahoo! User  •  6 mths ago
      , pretty soon I really expect them to put bill changers on the bathroom doors.
    • JMS  •  Romeoville, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Good luck having a 3rd world country enforce any laws to protect residents or foreigners. The FAA is trying here but can't do a thing there.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Irvine, United States  •  6 mths ago
      The airline name should be "CON"-TEL
    • R.T. Arcand  •  Minneapolis, United States  •  6 mths ago
      And their aircraft are maintaned proprely? This is a crash waiting to happen.
    • gedunk  •  6 mths ago
      Another tax cut for the job creators owning thses companies should clear things up.
    • RichardinMD  •  Baltimore, United States  •  6 mths ago
      when they got to england, the passengers should have stormed the cockpit and held the crew until the police showed up to arrest the crew for extortion and kidnapping!
    • Bill  •  6 mths ago
      Sounds like a Russian tale to me
    • Constance  •  Detroit, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Talk about businesses nickle and diming you, this tops it all !
      • janet 6 mths ago
        Five and dime wasn't much according to 88.6 mile/hour smith.
    • MikeyT  •  Houston, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Wow, there is an airline worse than United/Continental.
      • LINDA N 6 mths ago
        I'm not sure it is worse. Continental did not DEMAND I pay extra. For sure I will never fly on their airline again and I thank the article for warning me about yet another - airline company?
    • Annoyed  •  6 mths ago
      They're lucky it didn't happen in the U.S. or they'd be facing kidnapping and extortion charges. Additionally, if there were any children on the plane the charges would also tag them as sexual offenders since kidnapping of a child automatically adds it to the charges.
    • alex  •  6 mths ago
      This ain't over yet ! !
    • Tony  •  Sacramento, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Very bad advertising for the airline industry in general
    • tomas  •  Winston-Salem, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Stay at home: airlines have become the pits!
    • Larry  •  Indianapolis, United States  •  6 mths ago
      I would have been off that airplane in a hurry. I would not have paid even if it cost me more than the ransom for a ticket on another airline.
    • Chewbone69  •  Wallingford, United States  •  6 mths ago
      If I were on that flight, I would have asked everyone to please stay seated, and demand an immediate refund for our previous flight. I would also refuse to disembark, given the fact that I had not reached the destination described on my ticket, and any monetary problems I incur by remaining stranded would be the responsibility of the airline company. This is absolutely outrageous.
    • Tone  •  6 mths ago
      An airline company hijacking its own passengers. That's really creative.
      • George 6 mths ago
        American, Delta, and US Air are probably reading this saga with great interest.