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No intention to privatize Air India: Ajit Singh

New Delhi: Civil Aviation Minister Ajit Singh on Sunday attacked left parties saying that it has “no intention” to do so. 
Asking the government not to take a “disastrous move” which will go against national interest, senior CPI leader D Raja said the government had promised to bring a civil aviation policy but did not do it in so many years.

“It is undertaking privatization in bits and pieces without taking Parliament into confidence. While equity was not being infused in AI in accordance with the turn around plan, Airports Authority of India (AAI) was also being systematically undermined. This is a conscious effort to dismantle both these public sector undertakings,” the CPI national secretary said.

Raja said it was also “atrocious” that six airports including Kolkata and Chennai were being privatized soon after AAI has spent rupees thousands of crores of public money to modernize and upgrade them.

Maintaining that general elections were on the anvil, he said that these decisions should be taken by the new government after the elections. “What moral right Ajit Singh has to take such decisions on behalf of the next government,” he posed.

Noting that the government had released Rs 5,000 crore instead of the earmarked Rs 8,745 crore to Air India in the last fiscal, Raja said the remaining amount was not given.

“Even the amount allotted for this financial year has not been released,” he said.

Observing that privatization was not a panacea for all evils, he said Kingfisher Airlines has shut down and there were several other private airlines which had closed shop in the early 90s.

He said private airlines also owe enormous dues to AAI. CPI(M) MP Tapan Sen accused the government of performing “anti-national activities” by considering privatization of Air India. “The UPA government is politically inclined to sell the country,” he charged.

After spending over Rs 5,000 crore to modernize some 40 airports, it is handing over the management of these airports to private parties on a revenue sharing basis.

So, by making any investment the private parties will earn profits and the government will get only a part of the revenue after spending so much money.

On AI, he said government was going in the same direction. First, you make it bleed and then you sell it off saying it is not performing, he said. Both Raja and Sen said they will oppose such moves tooth and nail.

Denouncing the Civil Aviation Minister’s statement, CPI(M)-affiliated trade union Centre of Indian Trade Union reminded him that Air India belonged to the nation and was not the property of Council of ministers.

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