Civil Aviation Minister Ajit Singh on Wednesday said that the Kingfisher's license could be cancelled. Meanwhile, there seems no end to the lockout as talks with employees failed again on Wednesday.
In fact the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has blocked out the debt-ridden airlines' winter schedule. No flights have been operating since October 1 after the company ordered a partial lockout over a strike by its employees.
And it seems the lockout may continue with yet another failed attempt at talks. The employees claimed that they won't return to work until their outstanding salaries are paid. Employees of the beleaguered airline are planning to launch further protests as part of their nationwide agitation over unpaid dues for the last seven months.
The cash-strapped airline has to reply to the show-cause notice of the DGCA by October 20. The regulator had sent them a notice on October 5 asking why they should not cancel their license as it had grounded its entire fleet and failed to offer safe, efficient and reliable service.
It had given the airline 15 days to reply. Kingfisher, once India's second-biggest airline, last week extended what it has described as partial lock-out until October 12.
India recently allowed foreign airlines to buy a maximum 49 per cent stake in local carriers, a move long lobbied for by Kingfisher, although no airline has publicly expressed an interest in investing in Kingfisher. Kingfisher has been saddled with a huge loss of Rs 8,000 crore and a debt burden of over Rs 7,000 crore, a large part of which it has not serviced since January.
Meanwhile, the ailing airline Kingfisher Airlines has on Wednesday cleared the Rs 10.5 crore of dues to GMR, the owner of Hyderabad International Airport, and arrived at a settlement to cancel the non-bailable warrants served on its chairman Vijay Mallya and four senior executives.
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