Ailing Kingfisher Airlines, whose
services remained affected for the sixth day, on Wednesday filed a fresh
flight schedule with DGCA, scaling down its operations to about 170
daily flights with 28 functional aircraft.
Faced
with the regulators deadline, the airline submitted a revised winter
schedule of flights it would operate till March. This schedule is being
examined, DGCA sources said.
On
a day when over 30 flights were cancelled by Kingfisher, DGCA chief E K
Bharat Bhushan briefed Civil Aviation Minister Ajit Singh on the tough
financial situation faced by the carrier.
With
reports that banks were offering to help out the airline, the Minister
again made it clear that government would not give any dole to a private
carrier.
"We
have made it clear and I am sure Mr (Vijay) Mallya knows that Air India
is a government concern. Whatever help we give them (Air India), we
cannot do it to any private industry,” he said.
"We
have said it before that banks will decide that (pumping in money).
Government is not going to interfere in it. Banks have to follow RBI
guidelines. They have to worry about their NPAs (non-performing assets).
They have to decide on the basis of the business plan of the company.
If they are satisfied with the business plan, they can lend money," he
said.
Sources
said that as per the revised schedule, the airline would operate about
170 flights daily, instead of over 400 it had sought permission for last
October when the winter schedule for the airlines came into operation.
At
that time, Kingfisher had informed the regulator that it would fly 64
aircraft, a number which has now come down to 28 as many of its planes
have either been taken away by the lessors or were awaiting repairs and
spare parts or been cannibalised.
The
DGCA, which summoned the Kingfisher's CEO Sanjay Agarwal on Tuesday,
had asked the airline to come up with a "realistic" schedule which can
be operated by 28 planes.
Bhushan
is understood to have apprised the Civil Aviation Minister on the
discussions he had with the Kingfisher top brass and the airline's plan
to restore its flight schedule over the next few days.
Issues
relating to whether any action could be taken against the struggling
carrier for flouting the provisions of Aircraft Rules of 1937 are also
understood to have come up for discussion, though the Minister has made
it clear that closure of any airline would not be good for the health of
the Indian aviation industry.
Kingfisher
also partially resumed flights from Kolkata, operating four to the
Northeast, though it cancelled 14 from Mumbai, eight from Bangalore and
two from Delhi.
The entire Kolkata operations were shut down from Friday night.
The
cash-strapped carrier had faced the wrath of the Income Tax authorities
which froze its bank accounts, which, the airline said had been
primarily responsible for large- scale disruption of its flights.
Kingfisher,
which suffered a loss of Rs 1,027 crore in 2010-11 and has a debt of Rs
7,057.08 crore, posted a Rs 444 crore loss in third quarter this
fiscal.
No comments:
Post a Comment