New Delhi, Feb
23:
In a move that
could give an impetus to the Abu Dhabi-based Etihad Airways buying a stake in
Jet Airways, the Government is planning to issue directions that an aircraft
de-registered by the Indian aviation regulatory authority, the Directorate
General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), can leave the country even if the company
that has imported the aircraft has unpaid dues.
This move will
also help companies that have leased aircraft to now-grounded Kingfisher
Airlines and are having problems taking them back.
Cape town
convention
“Till now, the
Government was not interfering as we looked at it as a commercial issue between
various parties. But now, it has become a burning issue. So a meeting was held
with the DGCA and the considered opinion was that India will be in violation of
the Cape Town Convention on leasing of aircraft if it does not allow a
de-registered aircraft to leave the country because of unpaid dues,” a senior
Government official said.
This is said to be
one of the issues on which Etihad wants clarity before it takes a decision on
whether to pick up a stake in Jet Airways.
The Union Cabinet
acceded to the Cape Town Convention in November 2007, which offers benefits to
lessors and those in the business of mortgaging aircraft, including providing
additional security for repossession of aircraft in case of default especially
when payment obligations have not been met.
The rethink in the
Government comes in the backdrop of various agencies, including state-owned
Airports Authority of India and the service tax department, seeking monies from
various companies to take back aircraft that they had leased to the
now-grounded Kingfisher Airlines.
AAI, which is owed
around Rs 390 crore by Kingfisher, was allowing the aircraft to be taken back
only after the state-owned airport operator had been paid an average of about a
$1 million for each Airbus A-320 or ATR aircraft.
Kingfisher
aircraft
When the row
erupted in August last year, three ATR aircraft that Kingfisher had leased were
parked at Chennai airport. AAI had then argued that since Kingfisher had
curtailed its flights allowing these leased aircraft to go back would affect
the AAI’s chances of getting its dues from Kingfisher.
Senior Government officials now maintain that
airport operators need to seek bank guarantees from airlines at the time of
giving them permission to operate to their airports. In case of default in
payments by airlines, airports can then look at encashing these guarantees
rather than holding back aircraft. http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/industry-and-economy/logistics/govt-may-not-allow-detention-of-deregistered-aircraft/article4446726.ece?homepage=true
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