Oman Daily Observer

Troubled Alitalia to cut 2000 jobs

-

MILAN: Troubled airline Alitalia presented trade unions with plans to cut over 2,000 jobs and slash salaries by up to a third under a cost-cutting survival plan.

Unions said the job cuts would total more than 2,400, nearly a fifth of the company’s global headcount, while the company put the total at 2,000 and said there plans to recruit 500 new cabin crew by 2019 as the restructur­ing hopefully brings a return to profitabil­ity.

Company CEO Cramer Ball said the job cuts would mainly come from a 51 per cent reduction in office staff and a 20 per cent reduction in nonflying operationa­l roles.

“Headcount reductions are a painful but necessary action that, alongside other cost reductions, will stabilise our financial situation and create long-term sustainabi­lity,” the Australian executive said.

“These changes are essential if we are to compete effectivel­y in the extremely tough European aviation market.”

Union officials said that staff who survive the cull are being asked to accept drastic pay cuts — up to 28 per cent for pilots and up to 32 per cent for hostesses and stewards.

The unions called for a strike on April 5 to protest a restructur­ing plan which is likely to be closely scrutinise­d by the Italian government, which has been critical recently of the way Alitalia has been managed under the de facto control of Etihad Airways, Ball’s former employer.

Extensive jobs cuts anticipate­d for months making Italian carrier.

Etihad acquired a stake when it saved bankruptcy in 2014.

The Emirati airline partnershi­p declaring have at the 49 per Alitalia been loss- cent from entered the its intention to transform Alitalia into a leaner operation with industry-leading service standards — both goals it has failed to deliver, according to industry analysts.

The latest survival plan involves cutting costs by one billion euros ($1.07 billion) by the end of 2019 whilst simultaneo­usly growing sales by 30 per cent.

The company had said on Wednesday this would depend on unions agreeing new working arrangemen­ts and job cuts — issues which had already prompted a series of strikes in recent months.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman