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              New Delhi: 
              With accumulated losses amounting to nearly $3 billion, the 10-day 
              crippling strike of Air India pilots may have come at the worst 
              possible time for the flag carrier, but it has also raised the 
              pitch for privatisation like never before.  
              
                
              
              "The Maharaja had become a pauper a 
              long time ago," said Capt Gustav Baldauf, who was brought 
              specifically in to oversee the merger of Indian Airlines with Air 
              India and take the carrier back to its days of glory but quit a 
              few months ago as its chief operating officer. 
               
              "This mess is thanks to the management and constant interference 
              by the government," Baldauf, who has served carriers such as 
              Austrian Airlines and Jet Airways in various capacities, told IANS. 
               
              Experts said losses are not the carrier's only problems: There is 
              a problem with integration, human resource issues that have now 
              been compounded because of the merger, charges of irrational route 
              planning, and general mismanagement. 
               
              "Who will repay the bank loans worth $10 billion or the dues to 
              oil companies for fuel, or for that matter for leased aircraft and 
              the new ones that have been ordered," asked Amber Dubey, director 
              for areospace and defence, with global consultancy KPMG. 
               
              "On the other hand, Air India is also sitting on billions of 
              dollars worth of assets and property. What will happen to it? How 
              much of it will be on the block and who will have the muscle to 
              buy it?" Dubey queried again. 
               
              Some experts feel the role that had been envisaged for Air India 
              -- when it had to serve non-profitable routes for social reasons, 
              evacuate Indians in distress from both within and outside the 
              country -- is no longer required. 
               
              From being the dominant player in Indian skies about a decade 
              back, Air India's market share fell to 16 percent which was one of 
              the reasons why the government was reluctant to invoke the 
              provisions of the Essential Services Maintenance Act to tackle the 
              pilots' strike. 
               
              This despite the fact that the carrier has a fleet of 135 
              aircraft, of which 108 are its own, most of them new and acquired 
              in recent years from the Boeing Company and Airbus Industrie. The 
              carrier runs 460 daily domestic and overseas flights. 
               
              "The only way to salvage the carrier is to either bring in the 
              private sector or include a new stakeholder in the airline in some 
              form or the other," said Baldauf, under whose tenure the mandate 
              was given to Deloitte to come out with a turn-around plan. 
               
              Civil Aviation Minister Vayalar Ravi, who took charge of the 
              portfolio just in January, said the revival of the flag carrier 
              was his top priority and that every effort will be made to set the 
              house in order. 
               
              "We had already invested Rs.2,000 crore (around $450 million) into 
              the carrier last year and it will receive another Rs.1,200 crore 
              ($250 million) this year. So investment will come and the 
              turn-around plan will be implemented successfully," Ravi told IANS. 
               
              Air India chairman and managing director Arvind Jadhav said the 
              revival plan will focus on equity infusion, shift to long-term 
              loans, interest cut, making repair and ground-handling operations 
              into separate entities, and resolving integration issues. 
               
              But Air Marshal (retired) Denzil Keelor, the hero of the 
              India-Pakistan war in 1965 and an arbitrator between the flag 
              carrier and the unions in the late 1990s, feels it was time the 
              government sold Air India. 
               
              "It's our money. The tax payers' money. It can be used in so many 
              different ways. Let us build schools, roads. We need all the 
              resources to build this country and get people out of poverty. Let 
              us not waste it on Air India," Keelor told IANS. 
               
              "Otherwise, no one cares about the national carrier -- not the 
              politicians, not the management, and not even the unions. They are 
              all just there to use it for their own interests and nothing 
              more," Keelor added. 
               
              Yet some feel, even though the recent pilots' strike of 10 days 
              dented the carrier's image a lot, there was still scope to nurse 
              Air India back to financial and operational health. 
               
              "They can certainly do it. Don't forget it was the number one 
              carrier a few years ago. There is no reason why it cannot be done. 
              This is also a service industry. If the human resource issues are 
              settled, the rest will follow," said expert Ankur Bhatia of Bird 
              Group. 
              
               
               
              
              (Rohit Vaid can be reached at rohit.v@ians.in)  
              
                
              
                
              
                
              
                
            
              
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