Manila Bulletin

India’s Jet Airways holds crisis meeting after fund rejection

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MUMBAI (AFP) – The board of stricken Indian airline Jet Airways could suspend all operations Tuesday after lenders refused to release emergency funds to keep the debt-laden carrier flying, media reports said.

An emergency board meeting was called on Tuesday after the latest blow to the beleaguere­d company.

Thousands of passengers have been stranded in recent weeks after the airline, which has debts of more than $1 billion, cancelled internatio­nal flights because it cannot pay its bills.

Chief Executive Vinay Dube called the board meeting after lenders led by the State Bank of India failed on Monday to agree to give needed emergency cash.

“The management will seek guidance from the board on the next steps forward,” Dube said in an email to staff late Monday as he announced that the cancellati­on of internatio­nal flights was being extended to Thursday.

Indian dailies said suspending all operations was one option open to the board though this could mean Jet would lose its operating license.

Business Standard quoted sources saying the airline had only enough fuel to keep its seven remaining jets running until Tuesday afternoon.

An official from the National Aviation Guild, the union for Jet pilots, told AFP: “The airline is flying seven planes right now. The minimum number to keep its scheduled operations licence.”

Jet has been in a tailspin for months. Its fleet has been cut from about 120 in December. It has defaulted on loans and most staff have not been paid for many months.

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