by BERNAMA / pic by MUHD AMIN NAHARUL

Low-cost airline companies, AirAsia Bhd dan AirAsia X Bhd, have confirmed the retrenchment of 10% of their 24,000 employees last week.

This confirmed a Bernama report on Sept 28 that AirAsia might be planning a new round of layoffs involving hundreds of its personnel for the continued survival in an industry severely affected by the COVID-19 crisis.

In an interview with Buletin Utama TV3 yesterday, AirAsia Group chief executive officer Tan Sri Tony Fernandes said the move to terminate the services of the staff had to be undertaken given the reality of the aviation sector which was facing difficulty in recovering in the near future.

The aviation tycoon said the group was expected to operate on a smaller scale and AirAsia would try to rescue as many of its staff that had been laid off as possible.

“We are very motivated to win because we are very motivated to rehire and provide as many jobs as we can (for) the amazing staff that had done no fault of their own.

“AirAsia is all about its people. Whatever people want to say, we built a great company because of great people, 24,000 great people, and we lost some though it was through no fault of theirs. So my responsibility is to try to get the airline back (on its feet) and provide them other jobs,” he said.

In early June, AirAsia reduced more than 250 of its staff due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

In the interview, Fernandes also concurred with the government’s approach of not saving any airline companies with any capital injection, but he said support in terms of borrowings for the critical sector was needed.

“The government has put in the PRIHATIN Rakyat Economic Stimulus package, which is good and enough for us. That is fair as it is not a bailout; that is a loan, and we have to pay back that loan….

“Anyone saying PRIHATIN is a bailout is wrong. Malaysia Airlines has a big shareholder, Khazanah Nasional Bhd. I think it is the right thing that (Finance Minister) Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Abdul Aziz said business must stand alone,” he said.

Fernandes clarified that assistance in the form of the first financing was expected to be received end of this month.

He acknowledged that AirAsia had sought for funding of RM2 billion to RM2.5 billion, mainly from local sources.