South African Airways (SAA) CEO, Vuyani Jarana, says there are no plans to privatise the airline. He was replying to a question on the issue posed to him at the 2018 Southern African Transport Conference (SATC) currently underway at the CSIR International Convention Centre in Pretoria.
Jarana explained that trade union Solidarity had taken steps to place SAA into business rescue. He said that Solidarity had done this because it wanted a sustainable national airline that would not retrench staff and which included private sector participation. The labour union further desired an airline that is not a burden to the fiscus. “We have ongoing conversations with a number of unions, although Solidarity was not a part of the conversations initially. We brought them in to understand the context of what they are trying to achieve through the process of business rescue. We explained that what they want to achieve has already been stated by the government, so there is no need to go through a business rescue.”Private sector participation
The South African government pronounced in 2017 that it would include private sector participation in SAA and that there will be an equity partner involved. “We need to make the business attractive to potential suitors. Treasury is looking to move that process forward. But we do not believe that entering into business rescue will achieve different results from what we are doing.”Jarana said the airline needed to amend the commercial delivery side of its operations. He explained that the framework to do this needed to be correct.