MANGALORE: Boarding a wrong bus or train may not be uncommon occurrence, but an aircraft? In a first, a Bahrain passenger, bound for Dhaka to attend his child’s funeral last week, landed at Mangalore, southern India, instead.

Mohammed Alam Mamtazuddin, who was supposed to board a Gulf Air flight for Dhaka, the Bangladesh capital, landed at Mangalore’s Bajpe airport on May 25 by an Air India Express flight. The immigration officials, who were informed of this lapse by the airlines, deported him by the next AIE flight to Dubai.

An officer in charge of the immigration was shocked by this incident. “We have deported or detained people on the basis of fake passports, invalid visa etc. But this is for the first time I’m coming across such a case. How can there be a failure at multiple levels,” he questioned.

“In case he was an Indian, based on the validity of documents we would have deported or detained him. In case of foreigners we only deport unless there is a notice against that person,” said the official.

The Indian Airlines management here also is perplexed. “How can such multiple level checking failures occur?

The first mistake occurred during the check-in where the passenger was issued a Bahrain-Mangalore boarding card. But what was the passenger doing? We understand that the passenger was not in a proper state of mind after his child’s loss.

“But how can one miss the announcements? Moreover, the passenger spoke good Hindi. At some point he should have realised that he had boarded the wrong flight - at least by looking at the interior of the aircraft. It is shocking,” said the AI official.

By arrangement with Times of India

Opinion

Editorial

Momentary relief
10 May, 2026

Momentary relief

THE IMF’s approval of the latest review of Pakistan’s ongoing Fund programme comes at a moment of growing global...
India’s global shame
10 May, 2026

India’s global shame

INDIA’s rabid streak is at an all-time high. Prejudice is now an organised movement to erase religious freedoms ...
Aurat March restrictions
10 May, 2026

Aurat March restrictions

THE Sindh government’s 28-point list of restrictions imposed on Aurat March Karachi is a distressing example of...
Removing subsidies
Updated 09 May, 2026

Removing subsidies

The government no longer has the budgetary space to continue carrying hundreds of billions of rupees in untargeted subsidies while the power sector itself remains trapped in circular debt, inefficiencies, theft and under-recovery.
Scarred at home
09 May, 2026

Scarred at home

WHEN homes turn violent towards children, the psychosocial damage is lifelong. In Pakistan, parental violence is...
Zionist zealotry
09 May, 2026

Zionist zealotry

BOTH the Israeli military and far-right citizens of the Zionist state have been involved in appalling hate crimes...