DUBAI: Bahrain's
loss-making flag carrier Gulf Air, struggling against competition from
other regional carriers, has embarked on a sweeping restructuring plan
that has annoyed unions over heavy job cuts.
The company said
this week it had sacked 15 percent of its staff and closed four more
routes in January as it pressed ahead with a restructuring plan that it
launched a month earlier.
The carrier, one of the Gulf region's
oldest airlines, has been struggling to cut losses mounted by stiff
competition from fast growers like Dubai's Emirates, Abu Dhabi's Etihad
and Qatar Airways, as well as rapidly expanding budget airlines like
flydubai and Air Arabia.
It has also been hit by the kingdom's
political and security uncertainty that took a heavy toll on the economy
due to Shiite-led protests that erupted in February 2011, and continue
despite a deadly crackdown in March of the same year.
Gulf Air
was established in 1974, Abu Dhabi, Oman and Qatar partnering with
Bahrain. By the early 1990s, it had become the largest Middle East
carrier.
But its star shone only briefly. By the middle of the
decade, it started to lose ground because of an economic downturn in the
oil-producing region and competition from new carriers.
Bahrain's erstwhile partners divested and focused on building their own airlines, leaving Manama to bear the losses.
A
number of chief executives have been successively hired to restructure
the carrier, including former Royal Jordanian chief Samir al-Majali who
resigned just months ago after failing to replicate his success in
revamping Jordan's flag carrier.
Precise figures are unavailable,
but Bahrain sovereign wealth fund Mumtalakat said last year that it
lost 270.6 million dinars ($171.6 million) in 2011, due mainly to Gulf
Air.
The revamp aims to redraw the airline's network, focusing on point-to-point routes, as well as resizing the work force.
"In
January a total workforce reduction of 6 percent was realised. This to
date has increased to 15 percent," Gulf Air said on Monday.
This
is being achieved through non-renewal of contracts, restructuring in
outstations, natural attrition and a voluntary retirement scheme.
But Gulf Air's union is not happy, and is in talks with the labour ministry, but has not said what action it might take.
Bahrain is one of few Gulf nations that have strong labour unions that can take industrial action.
Union
spokesman Mohammed Mahdi said the company aims to dismiss a total of
1,266 employees in the first stage of restructuring -- 600 Bahrainis and
666 foreigners.
"That is more than 30 percent of the total workforce of 4,000 employees," he said.
However, very few Bahrainis have accepted the retirement proposal.
"Bahrainis
have open-ended contracts, while foreigners have fixed-term contracts,"
that are easy not to renew, Mohammed Mahdi told AFP.
For its part, the company said Bahrainis working at the headquarters now account for a record high of 85 percent.
It said earlier that it had increased its initial offer for compensation for retiring Bahraini employee.
Mahdi
also said "outstations should not be shut down without feasibility
studies," claiming that some of those closed destinations were busy
routes.
He also complained of a "lack of transparency."
The
airline said also it closed down several loss-making destinations as it
re-aligns its network with a focus on regional routes instead of the
"low-yield transit traffic," where big Gulf carriers are making long
leaps.
"Gulf Air continues to differentiate itself from its
regional competitors and carve a long-term niche in a highly competitive
business environment," it said.
It currently operates an all Airbus fleet of 26 planes.
In
November, Gulf Air said it had cut orders of Airbus A330 and Boeing 787
long-haul planes as it adapts to its new positioning as a regional
carrier.
It is not the first time that Gulf Air reduces its workforce over the past years in its struggle to cut losses.
In 2009, Gulf Air sacked 500 employees, when officials said it had already run up total losses of more than one billion dollars.
Earlier this month, Bahrain's second carrier, privately held Bahrain Air, announced entering liquidation after going bankrupt.
Both
airlines have also suffered from the closure of routes to Iraq and Iran
over political and security concerns following protests. The routes
were reopened in September.
Source: http://www.brecorder.com
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