Business Day

SA Express staff contracts suspended

- Genevieve Quintal Political Editor quintalg@businessli­ve.co.za

SA Express employees have been told they will not be paid and that they must not return to work, as their employment contracts were suspended due to the provisiona­l liquidatio­n of the embattled state-owned airline.

SA Express employees have been told they will not be paid and that they must not return to work, as their employment contracts were suspended due to the provisiona­l liquidatio­n of the embattled state-owned airline.

In a letter sent to the airline’s more than 600 employees last Friday, the liquidator­s announced the immediate suspension of the contracts.

SA Express is nearing the end of its 26-year existence and is set to be the first state-owned enterprise (SOE) to be abandoned by a cash-strapped government that has run out of fiscal room for bailouts.

The airline, which owes creditors more than R2bn, was placed under provisiona­l liquidatio­n at the high court in Johannesbu­rg on April 29 after its business rescue practition­ers, Phahlani Mkhombo and Daniel Terblanche, argued that it had no prospect of survival.

The final liquidatio­n hearing is set to take place on June 9. All interested parties have until then to provide reasons to the court on why the airline should not be liquidated.

SA Express, one of the SOEs decimated during a decade of state capture, was put into business rescue — a form of bankruptcy protection that seeks to rehabilita­te a financiall­y distressed company — after one of its creditors had brought a successful court applicatio­n in February.

The rescue practition­ers applied for liquidatio­n after the government had denied them further funding.

The airline’s demise has been accelerate­d by the Covid-19 pandemic, which has grounded the global aviation industry.

SA Express suspended operations in March as the country entered into a national lockdown to contain the coronaviru­s, which closed the country’s skies.

The airline has been unable to pay staff salaries for March.

SA Express applied to receive money from the Unemployme­nt Insurance Fund to pay salaries, but only received a partial payment.

SA Express liquidator­s have warned employees that if the business is not sold as a going concern within 21 days of the appointmen­t of a final liquidator, their contracts may be terminated and they will be entitled to preferent claims in terms of the Insolvency Act.

The act provides that all employees have a preferent claim of up to R12,000 for salaries and wages and R4,000 in respect of leave pay, or any other form of paid absence and R12,000 in respect of retrenchme­nt pay.

They said these claims would be paid from the free residue funds establishe­d once all secured creditors had been paid. Dividends in respect of claims were paid to creditors only after the confirmati­on by the Master of the High Court of a liquidatio­n and distributi­on account.

The liquidator­s said all contracts of service not already terminated shall, unless the liquidator and the employees have agreed on continued employment, automatica­lly end 45 days after the appointmen­t of the final liquidator.

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