Deadline looms for Alitalia deal
![]() Union protests forced the ailing airline to cancel 40 flights on Wednesday
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A consortium of investors has warned Italian trade union leaders they have just hours to accept a rescue plan for failed national airline, Alitalia.
The consortium said if the acceptance did not come before an investors’ meeting at 1400GMT on Thursday, the package would be withdrawn.
The deal would include longer working hours and 3,000 job cuts.
Union protests forced Alitalia, which is losing 2.1m euro ($3m; £1.7m) daily, to cancel 40 flights on Wednesday.
The carrier, which is operating under a bankruptcy commissioner, faces liquidation if a deal is not reached.
The airline says it is running out of money to buy aviation fuel.
Under the rescue proposal, the Italian consortium has put forward a 1bn euro offer for the airline.
Alitalia would merge with Air One, the country’s second largest airline, and its 1.2bn euro debt would be absorbed by a second firm, which would then be liquidated.
Disgruntled pilots
Italy’s four main union organizations – CGIL, CISL, UIL and UGL – have already signed up to the agreement with the consortium CAI, but five other unions have rejected the deal as “useless and provocative”.
![]() The new Alitalia would employ about 12,500 people
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Those opposed to the package – SDL, ANPAC, UP, ANPAV and Avia – include pilots and cabin crews.
The new Alitalia would employ about 12,500 people including 1,500 pilots, 3,300 cabin staff and 7,650 technicians, workers and managerial staff, Italy’s Ansa news agency reported.
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has pledged to do all he can to save Alitalia, in which the Italian government holds a 49.9% stake.
In April, plans for the airline to be bought by Air France-KLM collapsed.
Alitalia suspended trading in its shares in June and filed for bankruptcy protection last month.