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Italy in last bid to sell Alitalia, closure looms

Alitalia’s special administrator will make a last-ditch attempt to sell Italy’s loss-making national airline on Monday by public tender before calling in the liquidators after a failed rescue bid.

Alitalia faces liquidation in a matter of days after a plan to rescue the carrier by Italian investors collapsed last week when unions refused to accept its conditions. Flights continued as normal on the weekend but could be grounded in a week’s time.

With Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who made an election promise to rescue the airline, acknowledging no foreign airline was about to step in and that Alitalia could be doomed to bankruptcy, the auction appears a mere formality.

“We will proceed with a public request (for offers),” the special administrator, Augusto Fantozzi, told Il Messagero daily in comments published on Sunday. “It will formalize what I have been doing — without any results so far despite all my efforts — regarding the main assets.”

Suffering from the high fuel prices and an economic downturn that have hit the airline sector globally, Alitalia has been on the brink of collapse for years as political interference and labor unrest bled it of cash and caused it to pile up debt.

NO OFFERS

Berlusconi opposed the previous centre-left government’s bid to sell the state’s 49.9 percent stake, including an offer from Air France-KLM, saying it must stay in Italian hands.

The media mogul returned to power in May promising to rescue it and used his influence to rally 16 business groups in the CAI consortium payday loan. But CAI withdrew its offer last week after pilots and cabin crew refused to accept job cuts and new contracts. 

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Dieser Beitrag wurde am Monday, 22. September 2008 um 02:30 Uhr veröffentlicht und wurde unter der Kategorie business abgelegt. Du kannst die Kommentare zu diesen Eintrag durch den RSS-Feed verfolgen.

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