Air India has a new man in command. 
Written by Geetanjali Shukla, New Delhi August 13, 2011
Mr Rohit Nandan 
Written by Geetanjali Shukla, New Delhi August 13, 2011
Rohit Nandan, a joint secretary in the Ministry of Civil Aviation, has been named the airline's new Chairman and Managing Director. He has replaced Arvind Jadhav, whose term was slated to end in May 2012. Nandan is Air India's third chief in as many years.
Interestingly,  the announcement of Rohit Nandan's appointment came on a day when  questions were raised in Parliament about Arvind Jadhav's appointment in  2009. 
Gurudas  Dasgupta of the Communist Party of India (CPI) shared a note, dated  March 2008, in Parliament on Friday. According to him, the same  committee that named Raghu Menon (who was then the Special Secretary and  Financial Advisor to the Ministry of Civil Aviation) the chief in 2008,  changed its stance within a year and named Jadhav as the airline's  head. Dasgupta said: "The appointment is dubious; the performance is  dubious; the result is dubious; and dubious is the attitude of the  Government." 
Senior BJP leader Murli Manohar Joshi further  asked: "What was the need to terminate Raghu Menon's term within a year  and revive the selection committee?"
So not only has Jadhav's two-year term been tumultuous, his appointment too has taken a hit. In the course of his stint as Air India's CMD, Jadhav has faced employee ire - best case in point is the pilot strike  that cost the airline about Rs 200 crore - and seen the airline bleed further. 
According  to what Minister of State for Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions  V Narayanaswamy told Parliament on Friday, Air India's working capital  borrowings stand at Rs 22,165 crore, and it has availed of long-term loans  of Rs 22,000 crore to finance its aircraft acquisition programme. 
The airline's total outstanding payments stand at approximately Rs 5,000 crore.
Narayanaswamy added that the airline's daily revenue is Rs 22 crore, of which Rs 16.7 crore are paid daily to oil companies who have put the airline on a cash-and-carry basis since 2010. 
Highlighting  the tightrope walk that the state-owned carrier is forced to conduct,  he said: "Only Rs 5.3 crore is left with the airline to meet the  repayment of aircraft loans and part of interest payment on working  capital. This has resulted in non-payment of wages/salaries partly from  April 2011 onwards, non-payment to airport operators, vendors and other  regular payments."
To the flag-carrier's credit, it has prepared a  Turnaround Plan and a Financial Restructuring Plan in consultation with  SBI Caps. While the turnaround plan will look into improving the  airline's market and operational position, the financial plan  will look into realignment of debt and infusion of equity. 
BLOG: The Maharaja's Advocate 
Narayanaswamy  told Parliament on Friday: "The entire exercise of finalising the  Financial Restructuring Plan and restructuring of loans would take about  3 months." 
As part of the turnaround plan,  Air India will look into rationalisation of routes, re-scheduling of  aircraft, rationalisation of manpower, reduction in contractual  employment, and review of all agreements on all technical/operational  matters.
Will these measures and a change of guard at the top  help the ailing Indian carrier? Well, if one were to go by what the  Opposition thinks, the answer is NO. 
Raising doubts on Air  India's aircraft acquisition plan, Dasgupta said: "When V Thulasidas was  the chairman (appointed in 2003), only 28 aircraft were sought to be  purchased. But, post the change in chairman and change in guard, 40 new  aircraft were added to the list of purchase." 
This, when Air India's aircraft fly for an average of eight hours per day, compared to 12 hours of low-cost carrier SpiceJet.
The often-raised issue of foreign airlines being liberally granted rights into India was also brought up. 
Dasgupta  said: "You have surrendered the bilaterals. Air India has surrendered  the reciprocal facility. Why have they allowed Emirates to fly more  flights than Air India?" 
Emirates operates 185 weekly flights from 10 Indian cities, much more than what any local Indian carrier does.
High  taxes, lack of adequate infrastructure, price sensitivity of the  average Indian flyer, among other things, make the current environment a  tough one for airlines to operate in. 
But for the flag-carrier the battle is harder   - nearly six different companies (Alliance Air, Air India Express,  Hotel Corporation of India etc), about Rs 44,000 crore in debt, growing  discontent, political meddling, and a whole load of 'wrong' decisions. 

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