As the airline's fate hangs at the bankruptcy court, Goyal says he still hopes that a solution will emerge
Naresh Goyal is quite an upset man today.
A day after a consortium of 26 bankers led by State Bank said that it has decided to take beleaguered Jet Airways to the National Company Law Tribunal to recover their dues of over Rs. 8,500 crores, the company's founder and former chairman, Naresh Goyal has spoken out about the move by the lenders.
"I feel sad and deeply distressed mainly for our loyal employees who have waited months and were anxiously and hopefully awaiting a positive outcome to the Bank Led Resolution Plan," Goyal said in a statement. "I can only hope and pray that even now a solution can emerge and Jet can fly and fulfill the needs not only of employees but of air travellers who feel the absence of the Joy of flying," Goyal said in a statement.
The tribunal is expected to hear the matter on Wednesday (June 20). Once India's largest airline by market share, the 26-year-old company shut operations on April 17 after lenders began lining up to impound aircraft over non-payment of dues.
Jet's financial loss during the first nine months of FY18-19 stood at over Rs3,000 crore, forcing the Mumbai-headquartered company to seek a debt resolution plan proposed by lenders led by the State Bank of India. The decision was aimed at paying employee salaries, loan servicing, and aircraft rentals, after the company's net worth had turned negative.
As part of the debt resolution plan, lenders had acquired over 50 percent stake in the airline in line with a Reserve Bank of India guideline. It also booted out Goyal, his wife Anita, and two others from the board. Goyal approached Eithad and the Tatas to put in money into the beleaguered airline, but that never materialised.