Jet Airways pilots' union asks India's top court to direct lender to release funds
Jet Airways' pilots' union has appealed to India's top court to direct State Bank Of India to release interim funding to try to revive the grounded airline, according to a court filing made on Tuesday which was reviewed by Reuters. Jet halted all flight operations indefinitely on April 17 after its lenders rejected its plea for emergency funds, potentially the end of the line for what was once India's largest private airline. The debt-laden airline has struggled to compete with low-cost carriers like IndiGo and SpiceJet that now dominate Indian skies, and its mounting losses forced it to ground its planes. The National Aviator's Guild said in its petition that SBI's decision to not give the interim funding of 15b rupees ($216m), after agreeing to it in March as part a resolution plan, has resulted in the airline being grounded and has impacted the livelihood of Jet's 22,000 employees. This "singular decision" by SBI was responsible for the operations of Jet Airways coming to a stop and "substantial de-valuation/depreciation in the value of Jet", the union said in the court filing. SBI, as part of the resolution plan, has also invited bids from potential investor to take a stake in Jet. So far no bidders have publicly shown interest and the final bids are expected to be submitted by May 10. The union has asked the Supreme Court to direct the civil aviation ministry and aviation regulator to decline any further de-registration requests for Jet's leased aircraft and not to reassign its slots to other airlines permanently, according to the filing.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2019-05-08/unaligned/jet-airways-pilots-union-asks-indias-top-court-to-direct-lender-to-release-funds
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Jet Airways pilots' union asks India's top court to direct lender to release funds
Jet Airways' pilots' union has appealed to India's top court to direct State Bank Of India to release interim funding to try to revive the grounded airline, according to a court filing made on Tuesday which was reviewed by Reuters. Jet halted all flight operations indefinitely on April 17 after its lenders rejected its plea for emergency funds, potentially the end of the line for what was once India's largest private airline. The debt-laden airline has struggled to compete with low-cost carriers like IndiGo and SpiceJet that now dominate Indian skies, and its mounting losses forced it to ground its planes. The National Aviator's Guild said in its petition that SBI's decision to not give the interim funding of 15b rupees ($216m), after agreeing to it in March as part a resolution plan, has resulted in the airline being grounded and has impacted the livelihood of Jet's 22,000 employees. This "singular decision" by SBI was responsible for the operations of Jet Airways coming to a stop and "substantial de-valuation/depreciation in the value of Jet", the union said in the court filing. SBI, as part of the resolution plan, has also invited bids from potential investor to take a stake in Jet. So far no bidders have publicly shown interest and the final bids are expected to be submitted by May 10. The union has asked the Supreme Court to direct the civil aviation ministry and aviation regulator to decline any further de-registration requests for Jet's leased aircraft and not to reassign its slots to other airlines permanently, according to the filing.<br/>