--Airline employees have until Thursday to respond to offer
--Airline CEO doesn't elaborate on rest of the pending
arrears
--Airline likely to meet lenders end Oct or early Nov
(Adds details from company executive, employees and SBI
executive)
By Anirban Chowdhury and Ashutosh Joshi
MUMBAI--Kingfisher Airlines Ltd. (532747.BY) Monday tried to woo
its striking employees back to work by offering them three months
of pending salaries before mid-November.
The employees will reply by Thursday whether they accept the
offer. Kingfisher hasn't paid most of its employees for eight
months. Its pilots, engineers and technicians have on strike since
Oct. 1, forcing the airline to cancel flights indefinitely.
Kingfisher's offer comes after a more-than-two-week stalemate
between the management and employees over pay. The airline's chief
executive Sanjay Aggarwal and its executive vice president Hitesh
Patel had in the past few meetings tried to persuade its staff back
to work. But they had only said the airline will try to clear a
month's salary soon.
Resuming operations is vital for Kingfisher, which faces the
possibility of a complete shutdown. The airline's license was on
Saturday suspended by the country's aviation regulator, after it
failed to produce a plan to revive its operations.
Kingfisher, unprofitable since its inception in 2005, has
accumulated losses of $1.9 billion between May 2005 and June 30,
2012, according to a recent report by Sydney-based consultant
CAPA-Centre for Aviation. The airline also owes about $2.5 billion
to its lenders, suppliers, leasing companies and shareholding
companies.
After meeting some staff representatives on Monday, Mr. Aggarwal
said he expects the employees to accept the offer. He added he
expects them to return to work on Friday.
Mr. Aggarwal didn't elaborate when the airline will clear the
remaining five-month arrears, nor did he specify where the
cash-strapped company got the funds to pay three months'
salaries.
Kingfisher's employees were divided in their immediate reaction
to the management's offer.
Vikrant Patkar, a senior pilot who claims to represent the
airline's pilot union, said he "didn't see a reason why people
should not accept it." But a second pilot and a senior engineer who
didn't want to be named said the offer wouldn't be acceptable to
the employees.
Earlier in the day, Director General of Civil Aviation Arun
Mishra told the Wall Street Journal he will cancel Kingfisher's
license if the airline doesn't produce a viable operations plan
soon. Under the suspension, Kingfisher can start operations the day
it gets an approval from the regulator. If its license is cancelled
it will have to re-apply for one and wait much longer to start
flying.
Mr. Aggarwal said Kingfisher will take two weeks to come up with
a viable operational plan, provided its employees return to work
Friday.
The airline is also likely to meet its lenders by end October or
early November, S. Viswanathan, managing director at its biggest
lender, State Bank of India Ltd., said earlier in the day.
Kingfisher has been refused more loans from banks, given its weak
financial health. The airline's chairman Vijay Mallya in September
said he is in talks with foreign investors, including airlines, to
sell stake in the carrier. He also said the company is in talks
with Britsh liquor firm Diageo PLC (DEO) to sell stake in group
company United Spirits Ltd., as part of plans to raise cash for
Kingfisher.
Write to Anirban Chowdhury at anirban.chowdhury@dowjones.com and
Ashutosh Joshi at ashutosh.joshi@dowjones.com
--Nupur Acharya and Khushita Vasant from Mumbai contributed to
the article.
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