Expat pilots find another home || Times of India || 04-03-2007
Transcription
Expat pilots find another home || Times of India || 04-03-2007
Times of India(04-03-2007) ". q IJdia~rs become a globc:l village. Not j~t on the ground, but in the sky too. Expat pilots reflyi1Jginfrom allover to fill thesurgingidema.l1dhere-Sunday Times went on a voyage of discovery with three expats andfound themloving India, itspeople, its culture.... Shobha John I TNN I ndia Shining is the current buzzword in many sectors. But for eXI>at pilots, young or old. from US. New Zealand or Indonesia, It could . well be India Flying. Drawn to India's thriving aviation market which is growing at a scorching rate of 25% a year, these pilots. ovor 500, find the going good. And why not? More money, greater exposure and Jobs galore, Insiders say airlines incur $13.000-15,000per month on each expat. Yes, families have to be left behind, but there's no gain without pain, right? CAPT LEXMONO I COMMANDER, AlliANCE AIR When passengers speak to 45-year-oldCapt Lexmono, an Indonesian pilot, in Hindi. he's foxed. Can't blamethem.he looks Indian. The Indian influence extends to his name. a variation of Laxman. "My father, despite being a Muslim, was a huge fan of Ramayanaand gaveus mythological names. My sister is called Sita and mybrother,Yudhistira," he says with an easy smile. This former Jatayu Airlines pilot joined Alliance Air on June 7. 2006, and was the second In. donesian to do so. He flew B-737-2oosback home 100 and has had a chequered career. He started flying in 1984 with Garuda Indonesia and then went on to Sempati Air. After it stopped operations. he was jobless for two years. From 2000. 2001, he worked in Jatayu, but that too stopped In 2006. "I was Jobless for just six days and then gol the Alliance job luckily." Though both India and Indonesia follow International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) regulations. he finds them being enforced more strictly here. He averages 70-85 hours of flying monthly. Ask him about Indonesian pilots being sent back for poor English skills and he admits, "Stan. dards are higher here." Salaries too are better than Indonesia. How much better? "I think about 100% better," he says, after some humming and hawing. "Many are also coming here for the experience," he says. Alliance has 20 expats, 11 on Boeings and nine on ATRs. It wasn't easy leaving behind his wife and four children, aged 17 to seven. "I asked my family first if they were prepared to manage alone and they said they would try. I miss them and cali them everyday," he says. He's missed by them too, especially recently when his home got flooded in the incessant rains and his wife had to shift the enUre family to safety.Like most expat pilots.. he gets home once every ,',two months for 10-15 days. He's on a year's contract, and has ensconced imself comfortably in a f\tlly-furnished flat orket EsseI Towers in Gurgaon. "Inculturally akin to Indonesia, despite ifferent languages and religions." Imactically too, IndonesIa is ilke I1CIlaand has cold and hot regions. '. ..',e spicy food is so much like ,e. "I have even learned to tton curry and biryani," lid like his stint here to :erm and wants to bring ily here. "But I have y children to brush up 'English first. Myeld. daughter is a singer. 's already earning her , pocket money," says ,e proud papa. , As the lilting strains of Indonesian music flood ~" ~. . !~" the room from a stereo, ~~"\you tell him, that sounds ,> good, Captain. r"I n {j;O ~ . , Salaries here are amongthe best. Anyway, none of us has come to work for free. But let's face it; we aren't under any illusion that we'll be here forever. And none of us has a crystal ball to tell us how long the aviation boom will last. 9 Capt Jack Ekll SPICEJET cent here." Spicejet has 16 expats. So. why did he come to India? "I was fascinated by India's economy, history, ancient architecture and customs. India is on the cusp of a great time. And strides in aviation will go hand.in.hand with the economy," he says. From the time Ekl was in the US military, to exchange duty in Singapore. Hong Kong, etc, 10 S W Airlines. an airllne having some 42 daily fli. ghts between Dallas and Houston, flying has been in his blood. Varied weather conditions here,like in the US, are no sweat for him. Andjust as the light goes off, he jokes, "That would never happen in the US WIless there's a snow-storm." But what he still hasn't got a hang of here is bargaining. "I can't negotiate as well as Indians. In India, CAPTSYEDABBAS: On the GoIn the Air CAPT JACK EKL I CHIEFPILOT, SPICEJET This 60-year-old chief pilot of SOuthwest Airlines, Dallas. has the rugged looks of a typical Ameri. can. He joined Spicejet in September 2005. The veteran aviator worked in low-cost carrier S W Airlines for 22 years and has some 40,000 hours of flying, 30,000 on the B.737salone. Spicejet, too, has these planes and is modelled on that airline. He's brought with him loads of professionalism and strictness. But his warmth and humour leave an indelible impression. "My initial contract was for six months, but I've been here forone-and.a.half years. I've made friends here for life; Indians are kind and caring. But I still haven't got used to the hot, spicy food," he says grinning. And language? "Thoda thoda aata hai," he says haltingly. "But aviation parlance and procedures are the same everywhere. Besides, Indians speak good English, Including air traffic control. In fact, I'm the one with an ac. A - negotiation - be it the veg- if you're late, they'll yell at you! Many are forst. time fliers here and are simply glad to get back to ground," he says,amused.As for salaries here. they're among the best.'~nyway, none of ushas come to work for free." He's enjoying his time here. "But let's face it; we aren't under any iIlu. sian that we'll be here forever." And then? "I'll go back and do air shows like I did when I was part of the Blue Angelsteam of the USNavy." CAPT SYED ABBAS I OPERATIONS TRAINING MANAGER, GOAIR He's been flying Into India since 1996.AndCapt Syed Abbas, a 3U-year.old Egyptian, liked it so much he feels it's a home away from home. "I ~'. . it's all about etable-seller, the grocer, the cloth merchant. Peo. pie in the US don't negotiate on a daily basis. One has to be adaptable here." He stays in DLF City Club and makes sure he takes an Indian friend along when he has to bargain. His five daughters visit him occasionally. One of them is a 737 examiner. He's busy alright - doing check flights. simulator training in DUbai, Hong Kong and Mum. bai, flying some 20 hours a week, administrative work... And passengers? "The same everywhere . liked the environment, the warm people and the culture. so like Egypt. that I decided this is where I wanted to work next. I feel comfortable here." And like a homing pigeon, he came here in 2005. His international experience, be it with Egypt Air or with Gulf Air where he new the royal family, came in handy during his first stint with Kingfisher. Subsequently, he joined GoAir in May 2006. He couldn't have come at a better time. "No coun. try needs pilots as badly as India does," he says. And as airlines buy newer jets and expand, experienced expats are being grabbed. Abbas's knowledge of short; medium and long-range Airbuses (A-300-GOO, A.320and A.340) was useful here. "GoAir has six A-320s.of which two leased planes are going back. From October 2007 till 2OOU.end, we should be getting 10 new planes." He's flown in all kinds of inclement weather - cold (Russia), hot (Africa). cyclonic (China, Japan) and icy (Europe, Atlant,ic). It.s obvious Mumbai.based Abbas is happy here. "Indians are simple and friendly and not stuck-up. It.s not about money or position. I could get more money abroad. It's about satisfaction. And GoAir is being run, not as a company, but as an organisation where teamwork matters above all." It has some 20 expats. As an examiner, he's training pilots on Airbus variants, CAT-UI operations (30 trained last year) and going for simulator training abroad. "India urgently needs simulators," he says pas- I sionately. "Training should be the mainstay of any airline and with flying becoming a habit here, safety is paramount." And what of complaints Ihat expats are everready to throw UPtheir jobs for better salaries? "Pilots should be professional. It's good to say hello when you meet someone, but also Important to know how to say thank you and goodbye." Well said. He's not proficient in Hindi, but manages with namaskar, accha and pucca, "And no, no bad words," he says laughing. Besides English, he knows French and Arabic. He's often mistaken for an Indian, though his West Asian accent would give him away. Any plans to go back to Egypt? "I can go back anytime, but what I enjoy now is training Indian pilots," He stays at the Grand Hyatt in Mumbai. His young family in Cairo is sorely missed. "This is my daughter," he says proudly, showing a photo of a cute four.year-old wearing cooling glasses on his mobile. "I plan to bring them to my Indian home within a few months," he says wist. fully. "And I will stay here as long as India is happy with me, and I'm happy with India, which will be forever." Yetanother Indophlle Joins Ihe ranks. f"\ ~ ....... ~. . . /