Rats on a plane force Air India to ground aircraft

In this photograph taken on Oct 15, 2008, ground crew stand next to a newly-inducted Air India Airbus A319 aircraft during the opening day of India Aviation 2008 at Begumpet Airport in Hyderabad. -- PHOTO: AFP
In this photograph taken on Oct 15, 2008, ground crew stand next to a newly-inducted Air India Airbus A319 aircraft during the opening day of India Aviation 2008 at Begumpet Airport in Hyderabad. -- PHOTO: AFP

NEW DELHI (AFP) - Air India has been forced to ground one of its planes after crew spotted rats scurrying around the cabin, The Times of India reported.

The plane was on its way from New Delhi to Calcutta when staff found the infestation, the paper said on Tuesday.

"Rats on board an aircraft can lead to a catastrophe if they start chewing up electric wires," the paper quoted an unnamed airline official as saying.

"If that happens, pilots will have no control on any system on board leading to a disaster."

No one at the airline was immediately available for comment, but an Air India official speaking on condition of anonymity said rats on planes were a "common phenomenon" worldwide and could "get in anywhere".

"They follow the catering vans into the plane when they smell the food," the official told AFP.

It is not the first time that India's loss-making carrier has suffered a rodent infestation. Rats reportedly delayed a domestic flight from Mumbai by almost two hours in February, and in 2009 a flight to Toronto was delayed for 11 hours as staff tried to catch rats.

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