Millennium Post

Lanka’s loss-making airline hunts for buyer

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COLOMBO: Sri Lanka's national carrier will launch a new search for an equity partner after the IMF warned the lossmaking airline was dragging the country's economy down, officials said on Wednesday.

The government will call for fresh expression­s of interest next month to inject new capital into and manage Sri Lankan, back in the doldrums after a potential US investor pulled out in May

last year.

"We hope a deal can be concluded in the first quarter of next year," a treasury official said.

Attempts to privatise the carrier failed when San Francisco-based private equity firm TPG withdrew its bid for a 49 percent stake in Sri Lankan.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF), which bailed out the government with a 1.5-billion loan in June 2016, warned two months ago that restructur­ing Sri Lankan airlines was essential to sustain economic growth.

The flag carrier has debts and losses of over 2 billion.

The airline was profitable before Mahinda Rajapakse, when he was president, cancelled a management agreement with Emirates in 2008 following a personal dispute. The carrier had refused to bump fare-paying passengers and give their seats to Rajapakse's family.

Rajapakse removed the Emirates-appointed CEO of Sri Lankan and made his brotherin-law Nishantha Wickremasi­nghe head of the company.

Wickremesi­nghe is now under investigat­ion for corruption and mismanagem­ent.

In 2016, Sri Lankan cancelled an order made under the previous government to lease four new Airbus A350-900 longhaul jets after paying a penalty of 115 million to leasing giant Aercap.

A separate order for four Airbus A350-900 planes is to be renegotiat­ed, government officials said.

Rajapakse ordered all eight planes as part of a 2.3-billion programme for the airline, which is now the subject of a criminal investigat­ion.

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