Gulf Air Lays Off Hundreds As Sales Drop
May 31, 2011
Gulf Air, Bahrain's loss-making national carrier, said it had laid off employees and bookings were down a quarter following political and social unrest in Bahrain and the region.
"Due to the situation in the region as a whole as well as the Kingdom of Bahrain, Gulf Air witnessed a 25 percent drop in bookings in the first five months of 2011," it said on Monday.
The company said 200 employees were laid off, adding 100 of the laid-off employees have appealed the decision at an internal appeals committee and 11 were reinstated.
Bahrain saw the worst sectarian clashes between its Shi'ite majority population and the Sunni-ruled security forces since the 1990s after Shi'ite protesters, inspired by uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt, took to the streets in February.
In a subsequent crackdown by the government hundreds of mostly Shi'ite Muslim workers were fired.
Gulf Air has struggled to find a niche after previous owners Abu Dhabi, Oman and Qatar gave up their stakes partly to establish their own carriers.
It now focuses on regional routes in the Middle East to compete with airlines such as Qatar Airways and Emirates that serve global traffic linking Asia and Europe.
(Reuters)
May 31, 2011
Gulf Air, Bahrain's loss-making national carrier, said it had laid off employees and bookings were down a quarter following political and social unrest in Bahrain and the region.
"Due to the situation in the region as a whole as well as the Kingdom of Bahrain, Gulf Air witnessed a 25 percent drop in bookings in the first five months of 2011," it said on Monday.
The company said 200 employees were laid off, adding 100 of the laid-off employees have appealed the decision at an internal appeals committee and 11 were reinstated.
Bahrain saw the worst sectarian clashes between its Shi'ite majority population and the Sunni-ruled security forces since the 1990s after Shi'ite protesters, inspired by uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt, took to the streets in February.
In a subsequent crackdown by the government hundreds of mostly Shi'ite Muslim workers were fired.
Gulf Air has struggled to find a niche after previous owners Abu Dhabi, Oman and Qatar gave up their stakes partly to establish their own carriers.
It now focuses on regional routes in the Middle East to compete with airlines such as Qatar Airways and Emirates that serve global traffic linking Asia and Europe.
(Reuters)