By Abhijith Ganapavaram
NEW DELHI, Oct 9 (Reuters) - Neelu Khatri, co-founder
and head of international operations at India's Akasa Air, is
leaving the country's newest airline to pursue other
opportunities, at a time when delayed Boeing ( BA ) jet
deliveries have hindered its expansion plans.
Khatri is one of the nine co-founders of Akasa, which began
commercial operations in 2022 and is backed by Indian
billionaire tycoon Azim Premji's investment arm and the family
of late billionaire Rakesh Jhunjhunwala.
The airline did not immediately name a replacement for
Khatri, a former Indian Air Force wing commander. CEO Vinay Dube
said in an internal email seen by Reuters that Khatri's
transition was planned with the company's top executives and
that the Mumbai-based airline's international plans were
unchanged.
Reuters reported in March that Akasa Air's top executives were
privately criticising Boeing ( BA ) for delayed plane deliveries as
hundreds of its pilots were left without work.
The airline has placed orders for 226 Boeing 737 MAXs, the
delivery of which has been delayed by regulatory scrutiny and
supply chain snags.
Finance chief Ankur Goel told reporters in July that he
expected jet deliveries to pick up in the coming years.
The airline, the third largest Indian carrier by market
share in August, launched international operations in March 2024
and added its sixth international route earlier this year.