SAA rescue practitioner Siviwe Dongwana has confirmed receipt of a letter from government committing to R10.5 billion in funding to restructure the airline.
The time-lines for the funding will be determined in the following weeks, the business rescue practitioners (BRPs) said, after which they will engage with government on securing the money.
Dongwana said that National Treasury supports the government’s decision.
This followed after the BRPs called a meeting on Friday to discuss the future of the airline, after the money necessary to fund the business rescue process had not been secured on Thursday, 17 September 2020.
The department of public enterprises (DPE) has also called on SAA employees and creditors to be patient “while work continues to find a constructive outcome to challenges at the airline”.
“The department is aware of a creditors meeting called to discuss the future of the business rescue plan for South African Airways and protests scheduled to be held outside the airline’s offices on Friday. Efforts to locate funding sources continue. The DPE remains sympathetic and deeply mindful of the plight of SAA employees,” the department said.
In charting a way forward, the DPE believes critical to solving the difficulties facing SAA is:
In a statement on Thursday, the department said government is working with transaction advisors to assess proposals from several potential strategic equity partners for the airline.
“The department recognises the interests of workers’ and creditors.”
Meanwhile, the Democratic Alliance (DA) said yesterday that the meeting should have had one item on the agenda: the groundwork to begin the liquidation of SAA.
If President Cyril Ramaphosa’s government is serious about structural economic reform, the liquidation and closure of bankrupt entities such as SAA is a good place to start, the DA said.
“It has become clear by now that no one is coming to rescue the bankrupt SAA,” the party said in a statement.
“Quite clearly the promises made to SAA creditors on 14 July 2020 by the Minister of Public Enterprises, Pravin Gordhan, and the Minister of Finance, Tito Mboweni, that the additional funding of R10.4 billion over and above the R16.2 billion taxpayer bailout already budgeted for was wishful thinking and they have not been able to find any suckers willing to provide the R10.4 billion funding required to attempt the resuscitation of the ‘dead duck’ SAA.
“Ministers Gordhan and Mboweni would seem to have only one option left to them and that is to include a further taxpayer bailout in the Medium-Term Budget Policy Statement (MTBPS) in October 2020.”
The party said it had information that:
This is a developing story which will be updated as more information becomes available.
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