Malaysia Airlines cuts 6000 jobs

Malaysia Airlines cuts 6000 jobs

Malaysia Airlines is “technically bankrupt”, its new German CEO says as the carrier slashed 6000 jobs as part of plans to recover from deadly disasters and a long run of red ink.

Christoph Mueller has made public his plans for the troubled flag carrier for the first time since the aviation turnaround specialist was brought in on May 1 to save it from collapse.

They include the thousands of job cuts – expected but made official on Monday – a trimmed route network, a revamped brand image and an overhaul of the company’s organisation and operations.

Mueller, whose job-cutting stints at Ireland’s Aer Lingus and Belgium’s Sabena earned him the nickname “The Terminator”, said Malaysia Airlines’ desperate situation made drastic action unavoidable.

“We are technically bankrupt and that decline of performance started long before the tragic events of 2014,” Mueller told reporters, referring to a pair of disasters that rocked the already loss-making airline last year.

“The restructuring process will start today with a hard reset.”

Beset by poor management, Malaysia Airlines had struggled for years to remain competitive, posting losses for most of the past five years.

But its two shocking disasters in 2014 were the final straw, pushing the carrier to the brink of collapse.

In March of last year Flight MH370 disappeared with 239 passengers and crew aboard and remains missing. Four months later Flight MH17 was blown out of the sky, killing all 298 aboard, by a suspected ground-to-air missile over Ukraine.

A Malaysian state investment fund took the reeling airline over late last year, later tapping Mueller to take the helm. He is the company’s first non-Malaysian CEO.

On Monday the airline said it had issued termination letters to all of its roughly 20,000 employees, followed by new contracts offered to 14,000 of them as it aims to slim down.

Mueller said the 6000 job losses were necessary as the company suffered from cost burdens 20 per cent higher than those sustained by its rivals.

Under Mueller, 52, the carrier plans to “re-invent” itself beginning from September 1 with a yet-to-be-revealed new brand image and livery as it seeks to shed the stigma of disaster.

Mueller indicated a name change was possible.

“We will test that very diligently with test groups because we have to achieve a perception of a completely new start in certain markets where our brand is particularly tarnished,” he said.

But the plans were attacked by the carrier’s flight attendants’ union, which said employees were paying the price for the company’s poor management over the years.

“Today is the darkest moment for employees of Malaysia Airlines. I am having a tough time dealing with the emotions of those who have been terminated,” said Ismail Nasaruddin, the union’s head.

“It is very distressing. I have crew members crying all over the phone, saying they had been terminated despite having a sterling performance record.”

Aviation analysts have long blamed the airline’s failure to compete on poor management, over-reaching on routes, government meddling and unfavourable service and supplier contracts stemming from Malaysia’s crony capitalist system.

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