<p class="title">India has suspended a pilot for accidentally sending a hijack alert to air traffic control during a domestic flight last month, the aviation authority said.</p>.<p class="bodytext">The AirAsia India plane, flying from the capital New Delhi to Srinagar, suffered a stalled engine and the captain told the first officer Ravi Raj to send an emergency code to alert authorities about the situation.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Instead of the appropriate code 7700, Raj transmitted 7500 -- the code for a hijacking -- India's Director General of Civil Aviation said in a statement on Friday.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Such a transmission is considered a major security alert across the world. Precise details of the response from Indian authorities during the incident were not available, but local media reported last month that procedures for handling a hijacking were set in motion.</p>.<p class="bodytext">The Airbus A320 airliner safely landed later in the city of Chandigarh.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Raj was found guilty of "negligent conduct" and suspended for three months, the DGCA said, and the captain of the flight was also warned to be more vigilant.</p>.<p class="bodytext">AirAsia India, a joint venture between Malaysian low-cost giant AirAsia and India's Tata Sons, told the Press Trust of India news agency that it had received the "final remarks on an event where a flight from Delhi to Srinagar diverted due to a technical issue", but did not provide further details.</p>
<p class="title">India has suspended a pilot for accidentally sending a hijack alert to air traffic control during a domestic flight last month, the aviation authority said.</p>.<p class="bodytext">The AirAsia India plane, flying from the capital New Delhi to Srinagar, suffered a stalled engine and the captain told the first officer Ravi Raj to send an emergency code to alert authorities about the situation.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Instead of the appropriate code 7700, Raj transmitted 7500 -- the code for a hijacking -- India's Director General of Civil Aviation said in a statement on Friday.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Such a transmission is considered a major security alert across the world. Precise details of the response from Indian authorities during the incident were not available, but local media reported last month that procedures for handling a hijacking were set in motion.</p>.<p class="bodytext">The Airbus A320 airliner safely landed later in the city of Chandigarh.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Raj was found guilty of "negligent conduct" and suspended for three months, the DGCA said, and the captain of the flight was also warned to be more vigilant.</p>.<p class="bodytext">AirAsia India, a joint venture between Malaysian low-cost giant AirAsia and India's Tata Sons, told the Press Trust of India news agency that it had received the "final remarks on an event where a flight from Delhi to Srinagar diverted due to a technical issue", but did not provide further details.</p>