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Emirates airline to cut up to 9,000 jobs: report

11 July 2020, MVT 13:42
(FILES) In this file photo taken on March 2, 2020 medical equipment and coronavirus testing kits provided bt the World Health Organisation are pictured passing by an Emirates airlines Airbus A380-861, at the al-Maktum International airport in Dubai, as it is prepared to be delivered to Iran with a United Arab Emirates military transport plane. - Emirates airline has cut a tenth of its workforce during the novel coronavirus pandemic in layoffs that could rise to 15 percent, or 9,000 jobs, its president said, according to a report today. PHOTO: KARIM SAHIB / AFP
11 July 2020, MVT 13:42

Emirates airline has cut a tenth of its workforce during the novel coronavirus pandemic in layoffs that could rise to 15 percent, or 9,000 jobs, its president said, according to a report on Saturday.

The Middle East's largest carrier, which operates a fleet of 270 wide-bodied aircraft, halted operations in late March as part of global shutdowns to stem the spread of the virus.

It resumed two weeks later on a limited network and plans to fly to 58 cities by mid-August, down from about 157 before the crisis.

However, its president Tim Clark has said previously that it could take up to four years for operations to return to "some degree of normality", and the airline has been staging rounds of layoffs, as recently as last week, without disclosing numbers.

Before the crisis hit, Emirates employed some 60,000 staff, including 4,300 pilots and nearly 22,000 cabin crew, according to its annual report.

Clark said in an interview with the BBC that the airline had already cut a tenth of its staff and that Emirates "will probably have to let go of a few more, probably up to 15 percent".

A company spokeswoman told AFP the airline had nothing to add to the report.

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) has said that airlines are in line to make a combined net loss of more than $84 billion this year in the wake of the pandemic crisis, the biggest in the industry's history.

Clark said in the interview that Emirates was "not as badly off as others" but that the crisis hit just as it was "heading for one of our best years ever".

The Dubai-based airline had reported a bumper 21 percent rise in annual profits in March.

Dubai, United Arab Emirates | AFP

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