Business Day

Monarch chief ‘devastated’ by airline’s collapse

- Alistair Smout London

The boss of Monarch Airlines said he was “absolutely devastated” by the failure of Britain’s fifth largest carrier, which wrecked the holiday plans of hundreds of thousands of tourists and left most of its staff out of work.

The collapse of the airline was a result of higher competitio­n and lower prices in Spain and Portugal due to security concerns in other holiday destinatio­ns, CEO Andrew Swaffield told BBC radio.

“Yesterday was a heartbreak­ing day, 2,000 people lost their jobs and we’re all absolutely devastated for the customers and for all of us. It’s been a great family in Monarch.”

In operation since 1968, the airline was owned by investment group Greybull Capital, which had kept it going with a £165m injection last October.

About 90% of the staff from Monarch Airlines and Monarch Travel Group were made redundant. Maintenanc­e repair wing Monarch Aircraft Engineerin­g is not in administra­tion and was unaffected.

The decision to cease trading was taken on Saturday night, Swaffield said. While rivals such as Air Berlin and Alitalia have continued to operate after going into administra­tion, this was not an option for the carrier.

“The UK’s insolvency framework doesn’t allow airlines to continue flying, unlike in Germany or Italy,” Swaffield said.

He said the decision was taken as the airline was projected to lose “well over £100m” over the next year.

“We couldn’t figure out a way of reducing those losses significan­tly, either by selling the short haul airline, or by improving it,” Swaffield said. He said that he was working to help staff find jobs elsewhere.

The abrupt failure of the carrier left 110,000 passengers abroad. Britain’s Civil Aviation Authority said that on Monday, it operated about 60 flights to bring back nearly 12,000 customers, with a similar number of passengers due to be brought back on Tuesday.

A further 750,000 bookings were cancelled and planes that were meant to be used by Monarch will need to find new destinatio­ns.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Grounded: Signs inform passengers of Monarch flight cancellati­ons after the airline ceased trading, at Luton airport, Britain, on Monday.
/Reuters Grounded: Signs inform passengers of Monarch flight cancellati­ons after the airline ceased trading, at Luton airport, Britain, on Monday.

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