Photographs: Reuters
Hopes of ailing Kingfisher Airlines resuming operations on Friday faded on Thursday with last ditch efforts by the management to persuade striking engineers and pilots to return to work failing to end the deadlock over the issue of non-payment of salaries for last seven months.
Civil Aviation Minister Ajit Singh also expressed doubts whether the carrier, facing a partial lockout, will be able to fly from Friday.
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Hope of Kingfisher Airlines resuming operations fades
Photographs: Reuters
Kingfisher Airline chief executive officer Sanjay Agarwal and other top officials of the carrier held a meeting with engineers and pilots in Gurgaon on Thursday to convince them to join duty.
Sources said the management offered the March salary to the employees and promised to pay the remaining six months salary once the airline is recapitalised.
This offer was rejected by the engineers and pilots.
A similar meeting took place in Mumbai on Wednesday where the same offer had been made by the airline.
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Hope of Kingfisher Airlines resuming operations fades
Image: Vijay Mallya.Photographs: Reuters
The employees there had also turned down the offer.
Asked by reporters if it is likely that Kingfisher will resume its flights from tomorrow, Singh said, "I do not want to make any value judgements. My job as the civil aviation
minister and that of the DGCA is to make sure that before Kingfisher flies they follow all the safety parameters."
He further maintained that the airline should be in a position to get its planes certified and satisfy the DGCA that the schedule which they have given is maintained.
Singh said the flight routes and the winter schedule -- which comes in force by end of October -- will also have to be looked into.
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Hope of Kingfisher Airlines resuming operations fades
Photographs: Reuters
"In the winter schedule we have to consider all the routes and the landing spots. All these have to be considered afresh," Singh said.
Kingfisher has been saddled with a huge loss of Rs 8,000 crore (Rs 80 billion) and a debt burden of another over Rs 7,000 crore (Rs 70 billion), a large part of which it has not serviced since January.
Several of its aircraft have been either taken away by its lessors or grounded by the Airports Authority of India for non-payment of dues during the past few months.
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