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Judge Grants Mexicana Bankrupcty Protection Agence France-Presse go to original August 06, 2010
Mexico City — Mexico's Mexicana de Aviacion, one of the world's oldest airlines, was granted bankruptcy protection Thursday, enabling it to continue operations as it steers through its rough financial state.
The airline, which was founded in 1921, suspended ticket sales on Wednesday after seeking protection from Mexican and US creditors over its unprofitable model, mainly due to the worldwide crisis in the aviation sector last year, compounded by the swine flu epidemic that depressed tourism to Mexico.
According to Mexicana, Mexico's second largest airline, it has 786 million dollars in debts and 865 million dollars in revenues, but is hoping to reach a restructuring deal without having to disrupt day-to-day operations.
"A federal judge has granted the legal protection sought" by the airline against creditors, a Mexicana source told AFP on condition of anonymity, ensuring the company assets are not seized by the creditors.
The company's fleet comprises 65 aircraft from European manufacturer Airbus and two US-made 767 from Boeing, and transports some 22,000 passengers on 220 daily flights, according to Mexicana figures.
The airline had earlier attempted to kick off paycut negotiations with pilots and flight attendants to avoid bankrupcy - a drop of up to 41 percent and the axing of 700 jobs - in order to survive, but the union has so far rejected the cuts.
"The sale of tickets was suspended Wednesday, but flights continue to operate normally. In some cases, tickets purchased weeks earlier are being transferred to other airlines that are business partners with Mexicana," a source in the company told AFP.
High labor costs have driven it further into a hole, and the company is trying to persuade skeptical unions covering crews to accept the cuts. The talks are ongoing, with the union insisting mismanagement of the airline is at fault.
The Mexicana source told AFP domestic passengers were being put on flights run by Mexicana's Link and Click subsidiaries, and international passengers were finding seats on partners in its Oneworld alliance, which includes British Airways, American Airlines and LAN Chile.
Mexicana, which has been nationalized several times in its long history, was bought in 2005 by hotel group Grupo Posadas.
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