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INDIAN AIR LINES

SERVICES AFTER THE WAR

LONDON, May 24,

More than 11,000 miles of air routes are planned for India after the war, according to a Government statement on air policy, says Reuters New Delhi correspondent. The Government intends to promote the development of air transport services, internal and external, by a limited number of sound private organisations with their own capital and operated under normal commercial principles. In selected cases the Government will take a financial but not a controlling interest in the companies and appoint a director on the board. This policy does not rule out the operation of air services by the Central Provincial or State Governments. It is intended to operate daily services on a series of trunk routes radiating from the air ports of entry and exit at Karachi and Calcutta, supplemented by internal routes radiating from Delhi, Bombay, and Madras.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19450526.2.44

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXXIX, Issue 123, 26 May 1945, Page 7

Word Count
147

INDIAN AIR LINES Evening Post, Volume CXXXIX, Issue 123, 26 May 1945, Page 7

INDIAN AIR LINES Evening Post, Volume CXXXIX, Issue 123, 26 May 1945, Page 7