India’s Jet Airways flying just 7 planes amid investor talks

India’s *** Airways flying just 7 planes amid investor talks

NEW DELHI — India’s ailing *** Airways has drastically cut back its operations amid talks with investors on purchasing a controlling stake in the debt-laden *******.

Once India’s largest carrier, *** Airways is currently operating only seven of its 14 aircraft, and is flying only domestic routes, according to spokesman Gaurav Sahni.

A recovery plan led by government-owned State Bank of India and other creditors has so far been unable to staunch the bleeding at the *******, which had 119 aircraft on Dec. 31, when the company first defaulted on some of its $1.5 billion in debt.

*** Airways pilots demonstrated in Mumbai after deciding against a ******, saying they had not been paid in four months and asking India’s government for a lifeline.

“The appeal is to the prime minister to save *** Airways, to save 20,000-plus jobs which are at stake here, to pay our salaries,” said *** Airways captain Asim Valiani.

Company Chairman Naresh Goyal, who founded the ******* in 1992, resigned from the board last month but submitted an expression of interest on Friday to make a bid, Indian news media reported.

Goyal built the ******* into India’s largest carrier by offering an alternative to the unreliable schedules of the country’s state-owned airlines.

But it has been struggling for more than a decade since it borrowed heavily to compete against a new crop of budget airlines.

*** Airways was pinched further last year when the government imposed a 5% import tax on *** fuel even as petroleum prices worldwide rose.

Around the same time, the company announced it was low on working capital. Employee pay became irregular. Pilots and engineers began to jump ship, taking jobs at rival Indian airlines. Aircraft lessors began taking back leased planes in lieu of payment.

Mark D. Martin, chief executive of aviation consultancy Martin Consulting, said by Monday evening, *** Airways creditors should have a list of bids for a controlling stake in the *******. But Martin wasn’t optimistic.

“What are you buying into? You’ve lost your fleet, you’ve lost your pilots. How much of a value proposition is it to buy ***?” he said.

Sahni, the ******* spokesman, said international flights were scheduled to resume on Tuesday.






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