Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Cathay Pacific asks all staff to take unpaid leave

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(Hong Kong) AFP: Hong Kong’s flagship carrier Cathay Pacific is asking its entire workforce to take up to three weeks of unpaid leave, its CEO announced yesterday, as the airline faces a crisis in the wake of the new coronaviru­s outbreak.

The request lays bare desperate times at Cathay, which was hammered last year by months of political chaos and protests in Hong Kong and is now being further hurt by the fallout from the virus outbreak.

In a video message to the company’s 27,000 employees, airline boss Augustus Tang said they were being asked to take up to three weeks leave with no pay between March and June.

“I am hoping all of you will participat­e, from our frontline employees to our senior leaders and share in our current challenges,” he said.

The coronaviru­s, which was first detected in the central Chinese city of Wuhan late last year, spread over the Lunar New Year holiday, which would normally be one of the busiest times for regional airlines.

Instead, dozens of internatio­nal carriers have reduced or suspended flights to China in a bid to halt the pathogen’s spread and as passenger numbers fall off a cliff.

Tang warned Cathay was experienci­ng “one of the most difficult Chinese New Year holidays we have ever had” because of the virus.

“And we don’t know how long it will last,” he added.

“With such an uncertain outlook, preserving our cash is now the key to protecting our business.”

He announced a series of measures to tackle the crisis, including asking staff to voluntaril­y take unpaid leave.

“I realise this is difficult to hear and we may need to take further steps ahead but by supporting the special leave scheme you will be helping at our time of need,” he told staff.

He also asked suppliers to reduce their prices and said the airline would make short-term adjustment­s to its capacity -- including an already announced move to cut flights 30 percent worldwide for two months, including a 90 percent cut to mainland China.

The last time Cathay asked staff to take unpaid leave was in 2009 in the wake of the global financial crash. “The situation now is just as grave,” Tang said. Hong Kong’s economy is currently in recession, battered by the Us-china trade war, the protests and the virus outbreak have hit the tourism and entertainm­ent industries especially hard.

So far 18 people have tested positive for the virus, one of whom died on Tuesday.

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