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When dreams crashland

The skies were the next frontier for the young urban professional. As the meltdown’s grip tightens and India’s struggling airlines look for a way to survive, it’s the employees who pay the price, reports Barney Henderson.

Updated on: Oct 16, 2008 12:58 AM IST
Hindustan Times | By , Mumbai
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Laid-off Jet Airways staffers staged two protests on Wednesday — at the airline’s headquarters and at Raj Thackeray’s party headquarters.

HT Image
HT Image

But at the end of a day of smeared make-up, frantic calls to parents and chants for justice, they remained jobless, united in their fear of an uncertain future.

The 350 protesting cabin crew were told on Tuesday that there would be no further flights for them and that their contracts were being cancelled. Most of them are in their early 20s, having sacrificed their studies and taken loans to train at Jet.

The employees were to be given their basic monthly salary of Rs 9,000 — well short of the Rs 33,000 they usually take home each month after bonuses. The probationary flight attendants were with Jet for less than a year.

They said they were prepared to take a salary cut of Rs 5,000, but complained that Jet refused to listen to them or give any reasons for their sacking.

The group blames one man: Vijay Mallya, who heads Kingfisher.

Some protesters were galvanised in their fight for justice, while others sat on the fringes weeping.

“This job gave us hope; now they are destroying us. They are playing with people’s lives. During training, they made us sing a song about Jet — ‘We are a family and we will stick together’. What sort of family is this?” said a 23-year-old air hostess from Rajasthan.

 
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