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Cus Cir No. 65/2001 Date 19/11/2001
Leviability of customs duty on fuel and other stores consumed on board during
extension flights in domestic sector -reg
A reference has been received from the Ministry of Civil Aviation requesting the
Board to allow duty free supply of fuel and stores to domestic extension flights
of Air India which ply between two airports in India carrying international as
well as domestic passengers. Such extension flights are presently operating
between Mumbai and Ahmedabad/Hyderabad/Goa/Calicut etc. The Ministry of Civil
Aviation has requested that such extension flights should be treated as foreign
going aircrafts, as these carry international passengers from an international
airport in India. Most of the passengers on such extension flights are stated to
be either in bound or out bound to international destinations. These flights
allow passengers to travel between an international destination and an Indian
airport such as Ahmedabad/Hyderabad/Goa/Calicut etc. on a single flight coupon.
2. The matter has been examined. It is seen that these extension flights ply
between two Indian airports without a trip to a foreign airport on their voyage.
They are assigned different flight numbers and IGM/EGM No. per voyage, and ferry
passengers within the territory of India only. Further, these flights are stated
to have no co-relation of any sort with the flights which have arrived from or
are bound to a foreign port at the point of loading or off-loading. It has,
therefore, been felt that the extension flights operating between two Indian
airports cannot be considered as foreign going aircraft, as section 2(21) of the
Customs Act, 1962 defines ‘foreign going aircraft’ as an aircraft for the time
being engaged in the carriage of passengers between an airport in India and any
airport outside India, whether touching any intermediate airport in India. The
domestic extension flights cannot be considered similar to flights which operate
between an airport in India and an airport abroad, touching one or more Indian
airports in between. Section 87 of the Customs Act, 1962 allows imported stores
to be consumed without payment of duty in a foreign going aircraft. It has,
therefore, been decided that the extension flights operated by Air India between
Mumbai and other airports or between two airports in India would not be entitled
to duty free supply of fuel and other stores.
3. These instructions may be brought to the notice of all concerned by way of
issuance of suitable Public Notice/Standing Order.
4. Difficulties, if any, in implementation of these instructions, may be brought
to the notice of the Board. Kindly acknowledge receipt of this Circular.
Sd/-
(Rajendra Singh)
Under Secretary to the Government of India