
Victrex shares climb 7% after profit beat and cautious FY26 outlook
Victrex shares rise 7% following strong profit performance and conservative FY26 forecast
White House confirms second deadly boat strike in Venezuela approved by US authorities
A top US Navy admiral ordered a second round of strikes on an alleged Venezuelan drug boat, the White House has confirmed.
The “double tap” strike on 2 September has drawn bipartisan scrutiny among US lawmakers. The Washington Post recently reported that two people survived the first blast and were still clinging to the burning vessel when they were killed, raising fresh legality questions.
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Monday that Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth authorised the strikes but did not give an order to “kill everybody”, as the report said.
“Admiral (Frank) Bradley worked well within his authority and the law” in ordering the additional strike, Leavitt said.
More than 80 people have been killed in a number of similar strikes in the Caribbean Sea since early September. Each announcement from US officials is usually accompanied by grainy video, but no evidence of the alleged drug trafficking, and few details on who or what was on board each vessel.
The Trump administration says it is acting in self-defence by destroying boats carrying illicit drugs to the US.
Both Republican and Democratic lawmakers have expressed concern over the report of the 2 September incident and have vowed congressional reviews of the strikes.
“President (Donald) Trump and Secretary Hegseth have made it clear that presidentially designated narco-terrorist groups are subject to lethal targeting in accordance with the laws of war,” Leavitt said during the Monday press briefing.
The press secretary neither confirmed the first strike left two survivors, nor that the second attack was intended to kill them.
Media reports that Hegseth had given the directive to kill all those on board the vessel during the 2 September strike have renewed concerns about the legality of US military strikes against alleged drug boats in the Caribbean.
Hegseth has pushed back against accusations in the report, calling them “fabricated, inflammatory, and derogatory”. On Monday, he tweeted that Admiral Bradley “is an American hero, a true professional, and has my 100% support.
“I stand by him and the combat decisions he has made — on the September 2 mission and all others since.”
In recent weeks the US has expanded its military presence in the Caribbean, as part of what it calls an anti-narcotics operation.
Trump warned on Thursday that US efforts to halt Venezuelan drug trafficking “by land” would begin “very soon”.
Over the weekend, the Senate Armed Services Committee said it would be “conducting vigorous oversight to determine the facts” related to the 2 September strikes.
Republican chairman of the committee, Senator Roger Wicker, said on Monday that the lawmakers are planning to interview the “admiral that was in charge of the operation”. He added that it was also seeking audio and video to “see what the orders were”.
The Armed Services Committee in the House of Representatives also said it would lead a “bipartisan action to gather a full accounting of the operation in question”.
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, a body of the highest-ranking US military officers, met both the House and Senate’s armed services committees over the weekend.
Discussions centred around the operations in the region and “the intent and legality of missions to disrupt illicit trafficking networks”, the group said.

Multiple experts who spoke to the BBC have raised serious doubts that the second strike on alleged survivors could be considered legal under international law. The survivors may have been subject to protections provided to shipwrecked sailors, or to those given to troops who have been rendered unable to continue fighting.
The Trump administration has said its operations in the Caribbean is a non-international armed conflict with the alleged drug traffickers.
The rules of engagement in such armed conflicts – as set out in the Geneva Conventions – forbid the targeting of wounded participants, saying that those participants should instead be apprehended and cared for.
Under former-President Barack Obama, the US military came under scrutiny for firing multiple rounds from drones, in a practice known as the “double tap”, that sometimes resulted in civilian casualties.
On Sunday, Venezuela’s National Assembly condemned the boat strikes and vowed to carry out a “rigorous and thorough investigation” into the 2 September strikes.
The Venezuelan government has accused the US of stoking tensions in the region, with the aim of toppling the government.
In an interview with BBC Newsnight on Monday, Venezuelan Attorney General Tarek William Saab said Trump’s allegations stem from “great envy” for the country’s natural resources.
He also called for a direct dialogue between the US and Venezuelan governments, “to clear the toxic atmosphere we have witnessed since July of last year”.
On Sunday, Trump confirmed that he had held a brief phone call with Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in which he pressured him to resign and leave Venezuela with his family.
According to reports, during the call last month, Trump told Maduro that he could go to a destination of his choosing, but only if he agreed to depart immediately. After he refused, Trump posted on social media that the airspace over Venezuela should be considered “closed in its entirety”.
Maduro requested amnesty for his top aides, and that he be allowed to continue control of the military after giving up the government. Trump refused both demands, according to The Miami Post and Reuters, reporting the BBC has not confirmed.
US officials have alleged that Maduro himself is part of a “terrorist” organisation called the Cartel of the Suns, which they say includes high-ranking Venezuelan military and security officials involved in drug trafficking. Maduro has denied the claims.
With additional reporting by Lucy Gilder and Thomas Copeland
Costco Joins Lawsuit Seeking Tariff Refunds Under Trump Administration
Costco Wholesale Corp. joined a fast-growing list of businesses suing the Trump administration to ensure eligibility for refunds if the US Supreme Court strikes down the president’s signature global tariffs policy.
The nation’s biggest warehouse club chain is among dozens of companies to file lawsuits in a US trade court since late October challenging President Donald Trump’s use of an economic emergency powers law to impose the levies, according to court records. It’s one of the biggest corporate players to jump into a fight largely driven this year by small businesses and Democratic state officials.
The Supreme Court heard arguments on Trump’s tariffs on Nov. 5. The justices put the fight on a fast-tracked schedule but didn’t say when they intend to rule. In the meantime, businesses of all sizes have brought cases pressing similar legal claims with the goal of avoiding uncertainty about their eligibility for refunds if the court rules against Trump.
Read More: Tariff-Paying Firms Line Up in Court to Get Paid If Trump Loses
Costco’s lawyers wrote that the complaint, filed on Nov. 28 in the US Court of International Trade, was prompted due to the uncertainty that refunds will be guaranteed for all businesses that have been paying duties if the Supreme Court declares the tariffs unlawful.
The lawsuit doesn’t specify how much Trump’s tariffs have cost the company to date.
Costco argues that it needs a court intervention immediately because Customs and Border Protection denied its request to extend the schedule for finalizing tariff determinations under Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. The company says that could jeopardize its ability to seek full refunds in the future.
Costco didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment on Monday.
White House spokesperson Kush Desai said in a statement that, “The economic consequences of the failure to uphold President Trump’s lawful tariffs are enormous and this suit highlights that fact. The White House looks forward to the Supreme Court’s speedy and proper resolution of this matter.”
Skeptical Justices
During arguments before the Supreme Court last month, key justices appeared skeptical of Trump’s tariffs, which have generated tens of billions of dollars a month. Lower federal courts ruled against the administration in a handful of lawsuits filed early on, but judges have allowed the government to enforce the tariffs until the Supreme Court issues its decision.
Other household names to bring tariff lawsuits in recent weeks include cosmetics giant Revlon Consumer Products Corp. and motorcycle maker Kawasaki Motors Manufacturing Corp.
The expansive, fast-changing tariff policies have disrupted the retail sector this year, threatening to raise prices of goods and hamper the purchasing power of US consumers who are already cautious following years of inflation.
The impact has been more muted than expected due to exemptions and changes in rates after negotiations, though some items such as electronics and apparel are more expensive compared to a year ago. While retailers have warned that they continue to see higher costs, many big operators have not pursued lawsuits like Costco — making it an outlier.
Read More: What’s at Stake as Trump’s Tariffs Face Supreme Court
Costco has said it’s working to mitigate tariffs, which primarily affect its non-food items. It has rerouted some products to non-US markets, ordered more inventory early to get ahead of the levies and purchased from fewer suppliers by consolidating buying. When items get too expensive, it’s changing merchandising altogether.
“We’re doing everything we can,” Chief Financial Officer Gary Millerchip said in an interview with Bloomberg News earlier this year. “Whether that’s working with the suppliers to find efficiencies to offset the impact of tariffs, or whether it’s sourcing with them often to different countries.”
For example, Costco said in May that it kept steady prices of pineapples and bananas imported from Central and South America because they are important items to customers. At the same time, it increased prices of flowers sourced from the region because they are less of a necessity to shoppers.
The club chain said its big size and limited assortment — its stores carry a couple thousand items versus over 100,000 for some big-box retailers — give it a leg-up when navigating tariffs. Still, it’s difficult to predict what will happen to prices, company executives said.
The case is Costco Wholesale Corp. v. Customs and Border Protection, 1:25-cv-316, US Court of International Trade.
Raptors Fall to 11th Place in Standings Following Back-to-Back Losses – Basketball Insiders
The Toronto Raptors hit a bump this week. They dropped two straight games after winning nine in a row. That slide pushed them down to No. 11 in NBA.com’s power rankings. They were No. 9 last week.
NBA.com writer John Schuhmann explained the drop. “The Raptors are going to the Emirates NBA Cup quarterfinals for the first time, but after winning nine straight games, they lost both ends of their weekend back-to-back,” he wrote. Toronto remains respected but must tighten up again.
Schedule Pressure and Injuries Take Their Toll
The timing of this slump hasn’t helped. The weekend losses began a stretch of five games in seven days. Schuhmann pointed out that Tuesday’s game against Portland starts a five-game homestand. That run could give the Raptors a chance to settle.
Injuries have been the main problem. RJ Barrett has missed four games with a knee sprain. Toronto has averaged only 103 points in that span. The number sits well below its season average of 117.6.
Jakob Poeltl also missed Sunday’s game in New York. He hasn’t played both ends of a back-to-back since Week 2. With Poeltl out, Scottie Barnes started at center. The Raptors then had their worst rebounding performance since October. They are now 0-5 when they collect less than 45% of available boards.


Offense Takes a Hit Without Barrett
The Raptors’ offensive struggles without Barrett have been clear. “The four games without him have been their worst offensive stretch (102.7 points scored per 100 possessions),” Schuhmann wrote. Shooting has also dipped across the roster. Barnes is the only Raptor with an effective field goal percentage above 50% among players with at least 25 attempts in that span.
Barrett will be re-evaluated this week. He could return during the homestand if his knee responds well. Toronto will host the Trail Blazers, Lakers, Hornets, and Celtics in a critical stretch. If the Raptors get healthy again, they should be positioned to climb back toward the top ten.
The Future is Here: Japanese Human Washing Machine
Japanese company Science is commercially producing its Mirai Ningen Sentakuki – Human Washing Machine of the Future – after an overwhelming response at the Osaka-Kansai Expo this year. Only 50 models will be made, with a price tag of US$385,000.
The pod, which was six years in the making, is set to retail locally for ¥60 million – and at that price, you know it’s no ordinary tub. It measures the bather’s biometrics via a sensor that makes contact with the individual’s back, and tailors the experience to be as much about wellbeing as cleaning. Personalized images are projected on the inside walls and the water is adjusted in real time to suit the mood of the user.
サイエンス・ミライ人間洗濯機CM(万博会場実機篇)
“The ‘Future Human Washing Machine’ is a modern-day scientific reproduction of the Human Washing Machine, which was exhibited at the Osaka Expo in 1970 and became a hot topic, and is equipped with even more futuristic features,” the company wrote in its introductory brochure. “The sensor attached to the back measures the bather’s biometric data, such as heart rate, in real time, and based on this data, optimizes the bathing environment to provide a space where they can relax and refresh. Images tailored to the bather’s physical and mental state are projected, and the strength of the water flow is controlled while observing their reaction, creating a more comfortable bathing experience.
“Through this device, Science aims to create a society that cleanses not only the body but also the mind,” it noted.
Science
That 1970s retrofuturistic model known as the Ultrasonic Bath (but was more lovingly referred to as the “human washing machine”) was a huge hit when it was showcased at the Expo by Sanyo – but it’s now frozen in time, on display at Osaka’s Panasonic Museum. Panasonic acquired iconic Japanese technology company Sanyo around 15 years ago.
“The bath incorporated the latest technology and conjured up visions of the future with its daring design,” according to the museum.
Panasonic Museum
Panasonic Museum
The 2025 human washing machine bears only a slight resemblance to that Sanyo prototype, and uses technology unheard of even a few years ago. At its core is its microbubbles system, something that Science has spent a great deal of time perfecting.
Microbubble technology is what it sounds like – using ultra-small bubbles to provide more efficient cleaning, using less water and taking up fewer minutes to wash surfaces. The company claims these bubbles are invisible to the naked eye and penetrate into pores to effectively refresh the skin like a good scrub.
“Microbubbles slowly rise to the water surface at a speed of about a few centimeters per minute,” the company explained. “Many microbubbles are negatively charged, a fact that has been confirmed in our research facilities. On the other hand, organic matter is positively charged, so the bubbles adhere to the organic matter, detach, and then rise to the water surface along with the organic matter. One application that makes the most of this characteristic is in a bath.”
サイエンス・ミラブルキッチンTVCM(トマトジュース)
Users step into the 2.5-m-long (8.2-ft), 2.6-m-high (8.5-ft) and 1-m-wide (3.3-ft) pod, slip into the reclining seat and close the lid, then the music, visuals and microbubble washing begin. If desired, the machine can then perform a drying cycle, allowing the user to emerge from the pod ready to dress in around 15 minutes. The company has stated that it’s not just about efficiency but the experience – like a personal spa session in the privacy of your own home.
The company hadn’t planned on selling the unit, but then decided to commercially produce it after the overwhelming response it received while on display – a reported 40,000 Expo visitors had applied to try out the machine. When a US resort owner contacted Science about acquiring a model, it announced it would make just 50 of them to go on sale. So far, one unnamed Osaka hotel has ordered a pod and will offer use to guests, and another has been bought by consumer-tech chain Yamada Denki, hoping it will be a drawcard to its flagship store in Tokyo.
“Our (company) president was inspired by that as a 10-year-old boy at the time,” Science spokeswoman Sachiko Maekura told newswire AFP. “Because part of the appeal of this machine is rarity, we plan to produce only about 50 units.”
Science
If it’s a little out of your price range (and even if it’s not, the company said this model won’t be sold for private use), you can see it at Yamada Denki’s LABI1 LIFE SELECT Ikebukuro center in Tokyo from December 25 – and, yes, trial experiences are available, though details are yet to be announced.
“In the future, if the technology evolves further and mass production systems are established, there is a possibility that a more affordable home-use model may emerge,” a Science representative said, according to South Korean newspaper The ChoSun Daily.
Source: Science
Trump’s representative to hold talks with Putin on strategy to bring peace to Ukraine
new video loaded: Trump’s Envoy to Meet With Putin About Plan to End War in Ukraine
transcript
transcript
Trump’s Envoy to Meet With Putin About Plan to End War in Ukraine
Steve Witkoff, a U.S. special envoy, traveled to Moscow to discuss a peace plan with President Vladimir Putin of Russia. Meanwhile, President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine traveled across Europe to shore up support.
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“Special Envoy Witkoff is on his way to Russia…”
By Shawn Paik
December 2, 2025
Xposure Music raises $42.5 million to acquire independent music catalogs
Canada-born music financing company Xposure Music has secured USD $42.5 million in new debt and equity funding.
The round includes debt financing from Andalusian Credit Partners and equity participation from “select family offices and private investors”.
This latest round brings Xposure Music’s total funding to over USD $50 million.
Founded in Montreal in 2021, Xposure Music is described as a “technology-driven financing and investment platform for independent music rights”.
Xposure Music says on its website that it has deployed funding to nearly 100 artists in the past 18 months, and that with this new infusion of capital, the company plans to “scale its efforts, funding additional artists and acquiring catalogs at a larger volume”.
The company, which says that it is powered by “proprietary valuation models and machine-learning underwriting,” reports having deployed “over eight figures into catalogs” across various genres.
The funding announcement comes on the heels of Xposure Music’s partnership with independent music distro platform Too Lost. Under the agreement, Too Lost will distribute and co-fund catalog acquisitions sourced and underwritten by Xposure.
According to last month’s announcement, Xposure plans to deploy “tens of millions of dollars in upcoming catalog acquisitions”.
Xposure Music said it will handle deal sourcing and financial underwriting using its underwriting and valuation technology that analyzes recorded music and publishing rights to identify and execute music investments. Once deals close, Too Lost will handle global distribution, rights administration and royalty processing.
Xposure Music said in a press release on its website on Monday (December 1) that as the music industry “grows increasingly competitive, access to financing has become a major hurdle for independent artists”.
The company claims to be “address[ing] this gap through [its] proprietary underwriting and valuation platform, allowing artists to efficiently access financing on their catalog, gain exposure to innovative marketing programs, and connect directly with the company’s network of A&Rs, managers, and producers”.
“We’re thrilled to work with Andalusian as partners in our mission to become one of the world’s leading independent catalog buyers.”
Ryan Garber, Xposure Music
“We’re thrilled to work with Andalusian as partners in our mission to become one of the world’s leading independent catalog buyers,” said Ryan Garber, co-founder and co-CEO of Xposure Music.
“Our goal is to continue to serve as the gateway for emerging artists to access meaningful funding and take their careers to the next level, and this investment gives us the resources to make that possible.”
“Independent artists should have access to the same level of financing and deal structures that were once limited to major stars.”
Gregory Walfish, Xposure Music
Gregory Walfish, co-founder and co-CEO of Xposure Music added: “Independent artists should have access to the same level of financing and deal structures that were once limited to major stars.
“With this new capital and our underwriting technology, we are doubling down on our mission to be long-term partners for the next generation of independent artists.”Music Business Worldwide
Aviation industry struggles to make flying more affordable for everyone in India
Salman Shahid travels frequently between Srinagar, the biggest city in Indian-administered Kashmir, and New Delhi. He runs Rise, a private coaching centre for students aspiring to join the Indian Institutes of Technology – the country’s premier engineering schools – in Srinagar, but his family is based in New Delhi.
Flying helps him save time. But increasingly, he just cannot afford it.
Before the COVID-19 pandemic, Shahid says, a one-way flight from Srinagar to New Delhi would cost him about 3,300 rupees ($37.20) on average. “Now, the same ticket is over 5,000 rupees ($56), and that, too, with very limited time options,” he points out.
This 50 percent surge in airfare has significantly affected his travel routine. “I don’t travel that frequently now,” he says. “Earlier, I would make at least four round-trips a month. Now, it’s come down to just two.”
He recalls once booking a ticket for just 1,700 rupees ($19) on Vistara, a domestic airliner, during a sale in 2019. “That kind of pricing now feels like a dream,” he says, adding that he struggles to understand how airfare has escalated so sharply in such a short period.
He is not alone.
According to a study published last November by Airports Council International (ACI), a global trade association representing more than 2,000 airports in more than 180 countries, India saw a 43 percent rise in domestic airfares in the first half of 2024, compared with 2019, the second-highest in the Asia Pacific and West Asia regions after Vietnam.
International fares also rose by 16 percent. India was third in this category. A study representing 617 airports in the Asia Pacific and West Asia regions, conducted by ACI in partnership with Flare Aviation Consulting, a management consulting boutique specialised in the aviation and airports sector, attributes this surge to high demand, limited competition on some routes, and a 38 percent spike in aviation turbine fuel (ATF) costs since 2019.
Prices rose from 68,050 rupees ($759) per kilolitre in cities like Delhi in January 2019 to 93,766 rupees ($1,046) per kilolitre in October 2025. Airlines are also recovering pandemic-era losses, further pushing fares up.
And even though there is no comprehensive study capturing fare trends in 2025, yet, experts say prices have continued to rise throughout the year.
“Despite the huge surge already, airfares aren’t coming down and are only going up,” said Vandana Singh, the chairperson of the Aviation Cargo Federation of Aviation Industry in India (FAII), a government-recognised body that promotes India’s aviation sector.
“The relentless increase in airfare does not reflect well on the accessibility of aviation in India,” Singh added, cautioning that the middle and economically weaker sections of society may soon find themselves excluded from the air travel landscape altogether.
‘Hollow catchphrase’
In October 2016, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched what his government has called the UDAN scheme – “Udan” means “flight” in Hindi, but the acronym stands for Ude Desh ka Aam Nagrik (Let the Common Citizen Fly). The stated aim of the scheme was to dramatically expand India’s aviation infrastructure, and open up dozens of new routes to make air travel accessible to lower-income Indians and people in smaller towns and cities.
While flagging off the first flight under the scheme in April 2017, Modi said, “I want to see people who wear hawai chappals [flip-flops] flying in a hawai jahaaz [aeroplane].”
His comments effectively became a slogan for the campaign, touted as the government’s bid to make flying affordable and accessible for millions of people from small-town India, many of whom cannot even afford shoes.
But that slogan now carries a tinge of irony, Singh said.
“With fares escalating consistently over the past few years, this inspiring slogan now risks becoming a hollow catchphrase rather than a lived reality.”
Under the Modi government, India has indeed witnessed a rapid expansion in the number of cities and towns connected by air, with airports more than doubling from 74 in 2014, when Modi came to power, to 157 in 2024.
But the numbers mask a deeper crisis that afflicts Indian aviation, experts say. Because the number of flights and routes has gone up, the total volume of travellers in India has remained high, even if soaring prices mean that many individual passengers are reducing air travel.
The country is the world’s third-largest domestic aviation market, and witnessed a 15 percent increase in air passengers, year-on-year, in the 2024 financial year, according to government figures.
Still, signs of turbulence are visible, even in the data. Domestic air traffic dipped to 12.6 million passengers in July 2025, compared with 13.1 million in June 2025. The numbers recovered in August to 13.2 million, but then dipped again in September (12.6 million), before rising in October to 14.3 million passengers.
Rohit Kumar, an aviation economist and a faculty member at Rajiv Gandhi National Aviation University, said that while passenger numbers have not fallen, “the rise in fares has quietly pushed the lower and lower-middle classes out of the skies”. New airports, more routes, and upper-middle-class travellers, who value time over cost, are continuing to keep total passenger numbers up.
Kumar added that the remote working culture that many technology and service-driven industries in India have continued to embrace since the pandemic has allowed employees to travel more frequently than before. This has boosted occasional air travel among higher-income professionals, he said.
However, despite year-on-year growth, the sector remains deeply unequal. India’s aviation sector, Kumar cautioned, is being carried by a small, affluent section, while the vast majority – emerging flyers that the UDAN scheme was meant to serve – are increasingly being left behind.
Singh of the FAII was even more blunt.
“The very people the [Modi] slogan referred to, those who wear chappals, are now being priced out of the skies,” she said.

‘Monopolistic trends’
More routes are not the only factor allowing airlines to keep raising fares, even if they are pricing out many passengers. They are also helped by shrinking competition.
In recent years, several major airlines have shut down, while others have merged after acquisitions.
Go First, which once held more than 10 percent of India’s domestic and international market, with 52 aircraft, ceased operations in May 2023 after filing for bankruptcy. Jet Airways, with a 21 percent market share and 124 aircraft at its 2016 peak, halted operations in 2019.
SpiceJet teetered on the edge of insolvency, especially between 2022 and 2024, due to mounting debt, legal issues, and grounded aircraft. In July 2022, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), India’s aviation regulator, cut SpiceJet operations by 50 percent. The DGCA cited “poor internal safety oversight and inadequate maintenance actions”. SpiceJet also faced significant delays, with a reported on-time performance (OTP) of 54.8 percent in January 2025, making it the least punctual airline among major carriers at the time.
Defaults on lease payments also led to aircraft repossessions, shrinking SpiceJet’s fleet from 118 in 2019 to just 28 operational planes by January 2025.
“The back-to-back shutdown of airlines in India severely impacted air travel, paving the way for monopolistic trends,” said Singh. With fewer players in the skies, dominant airlines can dictate prices and raise them at their discretion, she added.
In another major shake-up, Air India, India’s only public sector airline, was officially privatised in January 2022, when the Tata Group took over full ownership.
Following this, Vistara, an airline already jointly owned by Tata and Singapore Airlines, was merged with Air India in November 2024. The merger raised concerns and faced strong opposition from critics, including trade unions and opposition parties, who feared that the consolidation of Air India, Vistara, and AirAsia India – another Tata Group subsidiary also merged with the other two – would lead to an aviation oligopoly, reducing competition and consumer choice in the Indian market.
Zuhaib Rashid, an economics and research associate at the Isaac Centre for Public Policy, New Delhi, said the merger handed over control of India’s skies to just two private players, posing a serious threat to competition.
The only other major aviation player in India today is Indigo, which has 61 percent market share. Together, IndiGo and Air India now control 91 percent of India’s airline market.
Rashid argued that, had the government retained a stake in Air India, it could have ensured fare regulation. “Fully privatising airlines has reduced government control over pricing, and has allowed private players to dominate in a country where air travel remains a luxury,” he added.
Their dominance of the market also allows Air India and Indigo to jack up prices dramatically during peak travel seasons or emergencies, tour operators and experts say, citing two recent examples.
Sajad Ismail Sofi, a Srinagar-based air travel agent, pointed to the aftermath of the deadly April attack on tourists in Pahalgam, a popular resort town in Indian-administered Kashmir, in which 26 civilians were killed. As tourists in other parts of Kashmir scrambled to leave the region, one-way ticket prices from Srinagar to other parts of India skyrocketed from 5,000 rupees ($56) to nearly 12,000 rupees ($135).
After airlines faced major criticism and accusations of profiteering from a national crisis, prices came down.
Earlier in the year, Singh from the FAII recalled, one-way airfares from India’s financial capital, Mumbai, to the temple town of Prayagraj soared to 50,000 rupees ($564) – more expensive than flights to Paris – during the Mahakumbh Mela, one of Hinduism’s most sacred events in which devotees take dips in the Ganga river. The government eventually stepped in to pressure airlines to curb prices. However, Singh said that most pilgrims had already bought their tickets by then.
Al Jazeera has sought responses from Indigo and Air India to the criticism and allegations of using their market dominance to charge exorbitant rates. Neither airline has responded.

Higher taxes adding to the burden
Experts point out that airlines alone are not responsible for the rising fares. India’s high aviation taxes are a key factor too.
The country imposes the highest taxes on aviation turbine fuel (ATF) in Asia, which account for 45 percent of air ticket prices. By mid-2024, jet fuel prices in cities like Delhi and Mumbai were nearly 60 percent higher than in global hubs like Dubai, Singapore, and Kuala Lumpur, largely due to value-added taxes (VAT), central excise duties and additional cesses.
Passengers are also charged, as part of their tickets, a user development fee, ranging from 150 rupees ($1.7) to 400 rupees ($4.5) depending on the airport; a passenger service fee of about 150 rupees ($1.7); an aviation security fee of 200 rupees ($2.3) per passenger; a terminal fee of 100 rupees ($1.2); and a regional connectivity charge between 50 rupees ($0.6) and 100 rupees ($1.2) per passenger. Each of these amounts is small, but together, they add up. And they do not go to the airline, but to the airport or the government.
In June, the International Air Transport Association (IATA), which represents more than 350 airlines globally, called for greater clarity in India’s taxation system, arguing that it was too complex.
Amjad Ali, a travel operator from New Delhi, said he had been in the air ticketing business since 2005, and had never witnessed a sharp rise in airfares until 2020. “Fares used to increase gradually, but since 2020, they have shot up rapidly,” he said.
Ali usually books tickets on routes like Delhi–Mumbai, Delhi–Patna, and Delhi–Purnea. Patna and Purnea are cities in the eastern Indian state of Bihar.
He said that new airports, such as Purnea, have brought in more passengers due to the introduction of new routes. Before the pandemic, a Mumbai–Delhi ticket, booked well in advance, used to cost about 3,800 rupees ($43), but now, it is hard to find one below 6,000 rupees ($68) for the same journey.
Meanwhile, airlines have also started cutting discounts they used to offer to some sections of flyers. Previously, Air India offered a 50 percent concession on the base fare for domestic student travel, but after privatisation, this was reduced to only 10 percent.
The result, Ali said, is a noticeable decline in student travellers. “We rarely see students flying these days,” he said.
Ultimately, Singh from the FAII said, the industry was shooting itself in the foot by making flying unaffordable for millions of Indians.
“If we want air travel to become truly accessible to a larger section of the population, particularly those with limited financial means, the government and aviation stakeholders must work towards reducing these taxes and surcharges,” she said.
Until then, a plane ride will remain a flight of fancy for most of India’s 1.4 billion people.
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Trump releases executive convicted of fraud just days into prison sentence
US President Donald Trump has commuted the sentence of former investment manager David Gentile, who was just days into a seven-year prison sentence for fraud.
Bureau of Prisons records show that Gentile was released on Wednesday, less than two weeks after he reported to prison.
Gentile, the former chief executive and founder of GPB Capital, was convicted last year in what federal prosecutors described as a multi-year scheme to defraud more than 10,000 investors by misrepresenting the performance of private equity funds.
He’s the latest in a string of white-collar criminals whose sentences Trump has commuted.
Gentile was convicted in August last year of securities and wire fraud charges, and sentenced in May. His co-defendant, Jeffry Schneider, was sentenced to six years on the same charges and is due to report to prison in January.
US attorney Joseph Nocella said at the time of Gentile’s sentencing that GPB Capital was built on a “foundation of lies” and that the company made $1.6bn (£1.2bn) while using investor capital to pay distributions to other investors.
“The sentences imposed today are well deserved and should serve as a warning to would-be fraudsters that seeking [sic] to get rich by taking advantage of investors gets you only a one-way ticket to jail,” he said.
But the White House says the Department of Justice under former President Joe Biden made multiple missteps – and that investors were aware that their money could be going towards other people’s dividends.
“Even though this was disclosed to investors the Biden Department of Justice claimed this was a Ponzi scheme,” the White House official said.
“This claim was profoundly undercut by the fact that GPB had explicitly told investors what would happen.”
The official also cited concerns from Gentile that prosecutors had elicited false testimony.
Trump’s commutation of Gentile’s sentence does not clear him of his crimes like a full presidential pardon would, and it does not get rid of other potential penalties imposed.
So far in his second term, the president has pardoned or commuted the sentences of multiple people convicted of different types of fraud, including wire, securities, tax and healthcare fraud.
Last month, he pardoned Tennessee state House Speaker Glen Casada who was convicted of fraud, money laundering and conspiracy charges.
Correction 1 December 2025: This article incorrectly stated that Jeffry Schneider “remains behind bars”. It has been amended to make clear that he is yet to begin serving his prison sentence.

