Kingfisher Airlines,
the financially troubled carrier, is likely to get a show cause-notice from the Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), asking why its flying license should not be suspended or cancelled.
"The (Kingfisher)
management has declared a lockout. DGCA is looking into legal issues and
intends to issue a show-cause notice on suspension or cancellation of license. He (DGCA chief) intends to go ahead with the notice," Civil Aviation Minister Ajit Singh said.
This is being contemplated after the ailing carrier grounded all operations and extended lockout till October 12 after
failing to resolve the dispute with striking engineers and pilots to the deadlock over non-payment of salaries for last seven months.
Singh said the aviation regulator was studying the implications of the strike by the employees of the airline, which has grounded the fleet for safety reasons.
In Delhi and Mumbai, angry staff of the liquor baron Vijay Mallya-owned airline staged protest demonstrations wearing black-bands and carrying placards, to demand speedy disbursal of their dues.
Their protests came in the backdrop of suicide committed by the wife of a Kingfisher employee in national capital on Thursday, apparently due to financial stress due to non-payment of salaries.
The airline, which had earlier grounded all operations till October 4, extended it last night by another eight days, blaming the staff for the strike since October 28.
Replying to questions, Singh said: "Some companies strive (to grow), while some fail. Government can close them down or help them." The minister also maintained that the airline would have to satisfy DGCA on safety before it gets permission to fly again.
"There are a lot of factors involved in it, including the salaries of the employees, their disgruntlement issues and others. If the employees are disgruntled there is an issue of safety. In order to give them permission to fly, they have to satisfy the DGCA on all these issues. The rest is if the law allows or...if we want to suspend their licence or revoke it, we have to see if the law permits," Singh said.
With inputs from PTI