New Delhi: Government has ruled out any bail-out measure to cash-strapped budget carrier SpiceJet.
Civil Aviation Minister Ashok Gajapathy Raju also justified the actions taken by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation against the airline including withdrawal of its unused slots for flight operations.
"I don't think the government can afford to take on such loans onto itself," Raju told CNN-IBN responding to a question whether the government will extend any guarantee as far as the beleaguered airline's debts are concerned.
The Minister, however, expressed the hope that SpiceJet will come out of the current financial crisis.
"We hope not. We hope they (SpiceJet) will be able to fly out of the financial turbulence which they are going through," he said when asked whether the airline was going the grounded Kingfisher Airlines way.
Raju also said the Directorate General of Civil Aviation has done its job by withdrawing the airlines' unused slots and passing other directions to SpiceJet.
Concerned over the deteriorating financial health of SpiceJet and large-scale flight cancellations, aviation regulator DGCA had on Friday withdrawn 186 of its slots and asked it to clear salary dues of all its employees by December 15.
The airline had, however, in a statement on Friday, said surrendering the unused slots to an airport operators was a routine practice and it had already paid November salaries to almost 85 per cent of the employees two days ago.
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