IAF pilots to fly Modi on new 'Air India One' from next July

An Air India subsidiary will maintain the two custom-made Boeing 777 planes

Boeing 777 BBJ The business jet version of the Boeing 777-300ER | Boeing

Two custom-made Boeing 777 planes, which will be used to fly Prime Minister Narendra Modi and other top Indian dignitaries from July next year, will be operated by pilots of the Indian Air Force and not of Air India, said a senior official on Wednesday.

However, the new wide-body planes will be maintained by Air India Engineering Services Limited (AIESL), which is a subsidiary of the Indian national carrier, he said.

Currently, the prime minister, President Ram Nath Kovind and Vice President M. Venkaiah Naidu fly on Air India's Boeing 747 planes, which have the call sign 'Air India One'.

Air India pilots fly these Boeing 747 aircraft for the dignitaries and the AIESL maintains them. When these Boeing 747 aircraft are not flying the dignitaries, they are used by the Indian national carrier for commercial operations.

"The two new 777 planes will come to India from US facility of Boeing by July next year. They will have the call sign 'Air India One'. Only IAF pilots will be flying the two new aircraft for PM, president and vice president," a senior official of Air India said.

The official said four-to-six pilots of the Indian Air Force have already been trained by Air India to fly the Boeing 777 planes. "Some other pilots of IAF will come for training soon," he added.

The new planes will be used for the travel of the dignitaries only.

The Boeing 777 planes will have state-of-the-art missile defence systems called large aircraft infrared countermeasures (LAIRCM) and self-protection suites (SPS). In February, the US agreed to sell the two defence systems to India at a cost of $190 million.

The Centre is planning to initiate the process of divestment of its stake in Air India, which has a debt of over Rs 60,000 crore, from November this year.