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Jet Airways crisis: More planes grounded, pilots threaten strike

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Jet Airways crisis: More planes grounded, pilots threaten strike
Government asks banks to rescue cash-strapped airline as PM Modi seeks to avert job losses weeks before elections.

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Saddled with debt of more than $1bn, Jet is struggling to stay aloft [File: Danish Siddiqui/Reuters]

India's government has called for an emergency meeting as cash-strapped Jet Airways plunged into deeper crisis with angry passengers demanding refunds and pilots threatening to go on strike over unpaid salaries.

India's Civil Aviation minister, Suresh Prabhu, asked his officials to call for a meeting to discuss the grounding of flights, advance bookings, cancellations, refunds, and any potential safety issues regarding India's oldest private airline.

Saddled with debt of more than $1bn, Jet is struggling to stay aloft. It has delayed payments to banks, suppliers, pilots and lessors - some of whom have started cancelling their lease agreements with the airline.

Jet, which employs more than 20,000 people, has now been forced to ground a total of 78 of its 119 aircraft after failing to pay lenders and aircraft lessors.

Pilots will stop flying jet planes from 1st April 2019 if the company does not disburse due salaries and take concrete decisions
A SPOKESPERSON FOR THE PILOTS UNION

In a statement released late on Tuesday announcing its latest grounding, the firm said it was "actively engaging" with lenders to secure fresh liquidity and wanted to "minimise disruption".

The firm is also facing pressure from its many pilots who have not been paid on time, with unions threatening that they will walk off the job if salaries do not arrive soon.

"Pilots will stop flying jet planes from 1st April 2019 if the company does not disburse due salaries and take concrete decisions," a spokesperson for the National Aviator's Guild, a pilots union, told AFP.

Flights cancelled
The problems with India's number-two carrier come as other airlines struggle to turn a profit despite the sector rapidly expanding in the country in recent years.

The groundings have forced Jet to cancel hundreds of flights, some at the last minute, leaving passengers stranded. Many have taken to social media to voice their anger.

Jet's social media accounts have been flooded with often suddenly stranded passengers demanding information, new flight tickets and refunds.

"@jetairways We book our flights in advance so that we save on travel cost and you are sending cancellation [message] now?", read one irate tweet on Wednesday.

"I have sent a DM [direct message] regarding my ticket details. Please respond!", said Sachin Deshpande on twitter..

Another, Ankit Maloo, wrote: "Received an email for all together cancellation of flight days before departure without any prior intimation or communication over phone!"

India's aviation regulator, the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), on Tuesday warned Jet Airways to ensure that pilots under stress are not forced to operate flights.

The 25-year-old airline is in talks with its lenders - state-run banks led by State Bank of India (SBI) - and its biggest shareholder, Abu Dhabi-based carrier Etihad, to secure a rescue deal. But talks have dragged on and it is struggling to finalise a plan.

While on the surface Jet's future still hangs in the balance, there has been behind-the-scenes support from the government indicating that a bailout is likely, Reuters reported earlier on Tuesday.

The Indian government has asked state-run banks to rescue the privately held airline without pushing it into bankruptcy, as Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeks to avert thousands of job losses weeks before a general election, sources have said.

The DGCA said with the current fleet Jet is likely to operate only about 985 flights a week or 140 flights a day - down from an average of about 650 flights a day in March 2018.

Prabhu, in a separate statement on Tuesday, asked officials to continuously monitor the situation at Jet and ensure that public interest and safety are given top priority.
 
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Manoj Kumar
3 MIN READ

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - State Bank of India’s (SBI) chairman said on Wednesday that putting Jet Airways into bankruptcy is the “last option” and that its lenders are making every effort to keep the airline flying.

FILE PHOTO: A Jet Airways Boeing 777-300ER taxis at San Francisco International Airport, San Francisco, California, February 16, 2015. REUTERS/Louis Nastro

“We believe that it is in everybody’s interest that Jet Airways continues to fly,” SBI chairman Rajnish Kumar told reporters after a meeting with government officials, adding that placing Jet into bankruptcy would mean grounding the airline.

Jet has racked up over $1 billion in debt, and owes money to banks, suppliers, pilots and lessors - some of whom have started terminating their lease deals with the carrier.

The government has asked state-run banks to rescue Jet without pushing it into bankruptcy, two people within the administration have told Reuters as Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeks to avert thousands of job losses weeks before a general election.

New Delhi has urged state-run banks, led by SBI, to convert debt into equity and take a stake in Jet, which would however be “transitory”, in a rare move in India to use taxpayer money to save a struggling private sector company.

Kumar, however, said that any decision taken to rescue Jet is a commercial one and is not at the direction of the Indian government. He was speaking after a meeting with officials from the prime minister’s office and finance and civil aviation ministries to discuss the rescue plan for Jet Airways.

Talks with Abu Dhabi-based carrier Etihad, Jet’s largest shareholder, to secure a rescue deal are ongoing, the SBI chief said, adding that there is also the possibility of bringing in a new investor.

Kumar said that a resolution plan is “almost” ready and that it would not involve a bailout for any individual or the airline’s founder Naresh Goyal.

A spokesman for the opposition Congress party earlier on Wednesday held a press conference during which they alleged Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was using state-run banks like SBI to bailout a bankrupt, private airline.

This came a day after Reuters reported how the government is playing a crucial behind-the-scenes role to rescue Jet.

“On one hand, (the) Modi government is seeking to privatize Air India and on the other hand they are buying a bankrupt private airline with public money,” Randeep Singh Surjewala, a spokesman for the Congress party, said.

Reporting by Manoj Kumar,; Writing by Aditi Shah,; Edited by Martin Howell and Alexander Smith

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...tcy-last-option-for-jet-airways-idUSKCN1R116S
 
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"If you want to be a Millionaire, start with a billion dollars and launch a new airline."

The reason why PIA should be privatized. It is a huge burden on our economy.
 
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Good! All what is now needed is a gentle push.
 
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Can Niranda Modi call Imran Khan and request to open air-space? If Modi tries, there is a good chance Imran Khan receive his phone call. But this will lower India before itself and in its own eyes.
 
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modi will try to stop it by short time until elections .
 
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Something to do with Pakistan closing it's airspace :dance3:
Jet went bankrupt nearly a year back unable to compete with rivals.
Air Asia India wants to do a hostile takeover. Jet desperately wants to prevent that.
 
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