Millennium Post

Air India unions hold anti-privatisat­ion meet

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The Air India Unions Joint Forum Against Privatisat­ion on Saturday reiterated its demand to retain the carrier in the public sector saying the sell-off move comes at a time when it's making progress on all operationa­l and efficiency parameters.

It termed the move as a bid to "nationalis­e losses and privatise profits". The forum, which met here, represents the seven employees and officers unions. It comes two days after the Bombay High Court stayed the AI management bid to stop the meeting of the unions.

The meeting also decided to organise a national convention in Delhi later to chalk out future strategies to further strengthen their opposition to privatisat­ion. Terming the Niti Aayog recommenda­tion as "arbitrary and against national interests", the forum said the planning body has "acted as a vested interest to help corporates, both domestic and foreign." Blaming the government for being against the AI, they said it must end its antiair India policies that have, in fact, led to the financial mess that the carrier is facing now.

They particular­ly blamed the unwarrante­d decision in 2005 to order as many as 111 aircraft on debt worth around Rs 70,000 crore for the deep mess that the AI has landed itself into. They also pointed to the hasty decision to merge loss-making Indian Airlines with profitable Air India, for the troubles.

Another reason for the crisis was government forcing Air India to withdraw from several profit-making internatio­nal routes to allegedly favour new private airlines as well as some foreign carriers. The forum said these decisions were taken ignoring the house panel and COPU recommenda­tions.

Terming the sell-off move as "nationalis­ing losses and privatisin­g profits," the forum said the airline cannot survive without the profit-making subsidiari­es, like the engineerin­g arm and its production unit AIESL.

"If the government approaches Air India with the same sympathy it is trying to show to private sector players, (the government is reportedly planning to write off the over Rs 50,000 crore debt of AI before the sell-off) the airline would have no troubles going forward," the forum claimed.

The unions claimed that the overall efficiency and profitabil­ity have improved over the past few quarters with the carrier earning operationa­l profits and reducing its debt.

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