Archive for March, 2019

19/03/2019

China opens first cross-sea bridge across active faults

CHINA-HAINAN-HAIWEN BRIDGE-OFFICIAL OPERATION (CN)

Aerial photo taken on March 18, 2019 shows the Haiwen Bridge, south China’s Hainan Province. The cross-sea bridge, which was built over seismic faults, officially started operation on Monday. The total length of the bridge is 5.597 km, including about 3.959 km across the sea. The bridge, which links Yanfeng Township of Haikou City and Puqian Township of Wenchang City, cut the trip between the two places from an hour and a half to about 20 minutes. (Xinhua/Guo Cheng)

HAIKOU, March 18 (Xinhua) — The Haiwen Bridge opened to traffic Monday in the island province of Hainan as the first cross-sea bridge crossing active faults and the most earthquake-resistant bridge in China.

The 5.59-km bridge connects the Hainan capital Haikou and Puqian, an island town in the city of Wenchang which is also known as the hometown of many overseas Chinese.

The six-lane bridge, which cuts the travel time between Puqian and Haikou from 1.5 hours to just 20 minutes, is expected to promote the integration of coastal industries in northeast Hainan, said Lin Dong, head of the provincial department of transportation.

With a total investment of 3 billion yuan (about 447 million U.S. dollars), the bridge was under strict marine monitor throughout its construction.

19/03/2019

China-EU strategic dialogue stresses cooperation

BELGIUM-BRUSSELS-CHINA-WANG YI-CHINA-EU HIGH-LEVEL STRATEGIC DIALOGUE

Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi (L) shakes hands with Federica Mogherini, EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy during the ninth round of the China-EU high-level strategic dialogue in Brussels, Belgium, March 18, 2019. (Xinhua/Zhang Cheng)

BRUSSELS, March 18 (Xinhua) — The ninth round of the China-EU High-level Strategic Dialogue on Monday in Brussels underlined the need to strengthen the bilateral partnership.

The dialogue was co-chaired by Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister, Wang Yi and EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Federica Mogherini.

Wang said that China and the European Union are comprehensive strategic partners. Facing the turbulent international situation, the two sides have developed fruitful communication and cooperation, playing the role of “stabilizer”.

China and Europe, as two major powers in the world, should take this responsibility. The level and scale of bilateral cooperation are at a historic high, and there is still great potential, said Wang.

The two sides should continue cooperation, adopt problem-solving orientation, explore new methods, new areas and new impetus in the partnerships regarding peace, growth, reform and civilization, and further the enhancement of the comprehensive strategic partnership between China and the EU.

Wang underlined three points. Firstly, cooperative partnership is the nature of China-EU relations. The common ground is to appreciate the development of bilateral relations, although the two have differences on some issues.

Wang believed there is no essential conflict of interest between China and the EU. The two can seek common ground while reserving differences, but also consolidate the common ground while resolving differences, maximizing the common interest and perception.

Secondly, the goal of China-EU cooperation is to achieve mutual benefit and win-win outcome, said Wang, hoping that Europe will stand to benefit from the new round of Chinese reform and opening-up. He welcomed Europe to participate in the construction of the Belt and Road Initiative, and expected to see the Europe-Asia connectivity plan to complement the Belt and Road Initiative.

Thirdly, Wang said the respect of each other’s core interest is the trademark of the trust between China and the EU, and he hoped the EU could be discreet in words and deeds. China is willing to work with the EU to maintain a sound development of bilateral relations, benefit the people of the two sides, and contribute more to the world’s peace and development.

Mogherini said the EU-China relations have reached a new high in the past five years in terms of their depth and extent. The two share common stance and goal against unilateralism and protectionism, and both support the international order established around the United Nations.

For the first time, the Chinese foreign minister met the foreign ministers of the 28 EU members on Monday, and they discussed about strengthening the EU-China cooperation. The EU regards China as its important strategic partner, not only economically but also politically, Mogherini noted.

The EU’s new document on policy towards China published last week will not replace the current EU strategic cooperation with China, she said. The EU has no intention to impede the development of China, and it is impossible to do it. The EU wants to see a bigger leading role played by China on global issues.

The EU has differences with China in a number of issues, but has always looked upon the bilateral strategic partnership from the perspective of common prosperity. The EU will continue sticking to the one-China policy without any change, she added.

Mogherini noted that the EU, along with China, will push for the implementation of multilateral agreements, and work closely on issues like the Paris agreement, Iran nuclear agreement, sustainable development goals, African development and so on.

The EU is willing to enhance the connectivity and communication with Asia, explore the complementarities with the Belt and Road Initiative, and vigorously carry out third-party cooperation. The EU hopes to strengthen the security and defense cooperation with China, which is not targeting any third parties. The two sides can cooperate in cyber-security, safeguard the openness, safety and stability of the internet, and establish an order of the digital world based on rules, noted Mogherini.

The two sides also exchanged opinions on the current international situation, the respective relations with major powers, and global and regional hot issues.

Source: Xinhua

19/03/2019

Chinese train operator apologises for demanding medical ID from doctor treating sick passenger

  • Physician ‘felt terrible’ after questioning by train conductor
  • Train company says ID check on volunteers is not standard procedure
Dr Chen answered a call for medical assistance aboard a China Railway Nanning Group train, and staff demanded that she produce her licence. Photo: Pear Video
Dr Chen answered a call for medical assistance aboard a China Railway Nanning Group train, and staff demanded that she produce her licence. Photo: Pear Video
China Railway Nanning Group apologised to medical professionals after train staff demanded that a doctor produce her licence as she treated a fellow passenger.
The physician, identified only as Chen, was on a train from Liuzhou to Nanning in Guangxi on Sunday when there was a call for a volunteer to attend an emergency, she told Jianghuai Medicine, a social media news source for medical professionals.

She went to the carriage and found a man in his 40s complaining of severe pain in his abdomen.

Chen asked the man for his medical history, checked his vital signs and examined him before concluding the passenger might have a gastrointestinal disorder.
The man’s condition improved after she gave him medicine from the train’s first-aid kit. She then advised the traveller to go to hospital and request an ultrasound to rule out other conditions.
When Chen made her way back to her carriage, she was stopped by a conductor and asked for her medical licence. The doctor then realised the conductor had recorded her entire diagnosis and treatment.

Chen could not produce her licence, and the conductor asked her to write down her diagnosis, her name, address and signature and photographed her identity card and train ticket details.

Chinese Good Samaritans offered insurance policy to protect them against extortion scams by the people they help

On Jianghuai Medicine, Chen said she “felt terrible” after the questioning and “I may as well not step up in future if something similar happens”.

On social media, some people agreed that a volunteer should be able to identify themselves, while others called for trust. One Weibo user said: “Should such appeals [for help] be changed to ‘doctors with a medical licence on them please come to help’?”

Another asked: “Why not put medical staff on each train since no doctors would dare to come forward?”

On China Railway Nanning Group’s Weibo feed, the company thanked the doctor for attending the patient and apologised for hurting her feelings.

Before being good Samaritans, Hongkongers need to learn the basics

“The staff did not communicate well with Dr Chen, causing a misunderstanding and creating bad feeling … The Nanning section of the group apologises to doctors and other medical professionals who have been participating in saving and treating patients,” it said.

The group said it was not standard procedure to ask for a copy of a medical licence in such circumstances, and recording the treatment on video was for the benefit of the patient.

Source: SCMP

19/03/2019

Philippines goes cap in hand to China as water shortage bites

  • Delegation from Manila lands in Beijing to seek loans and unlock funds for controversial China-backed Kaliwa dam
  • Critics say the Duterte government has engineered the water shortage to gain backing for the dam, which indigenous tribes oppose
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte. Photo: EPA
Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte. Photo: EPA
The Philippines has gone cap in hand to China as it struggles with a severe water shortage that has seen taps in its capital city run dry.
A delegation from Manila landed in China on Tuesday hoping to attract further infrastructure investment and speed up the delivery of loans Beijing has pledged for an irrigation project and a controversial dam that government ministers say will ease the water shortage. Any new loans they negotiate would be on top of the US$10 billion China has already pledged to President Rodrigo Duterte’s “build, build, build” project to transform the Philippines’ economy.
The site of the controversial Chinese-funded Kaliwa Dam Project. Photo: MWSS
The site of the controversial Chinese-funded Kaliwa Dam Project. Photo: MWSS

The delegation, led by Duterte’s Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea, will meet Chinese Vice-President Wang Qishan and officials at the Ministry of Commerce, China’s Export-Import Bank and China International Development Cooperation Agency, which reviews foreign aid projects. They will also brief potential investors from the private sector.

Duterte’s Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea, right. Photo: PRIB
Duterte’s Executive Secretary Salvador Medialdea, right. Photo: PRIB

The trip comes amid the most severe water shortage to have hit the Philippine capital in the past decade, with dozens of districts having gone days without water. However, it is likely to prove controversial in some quarters, as critics believe the water shortage has been engineered by the Duterte government as a ploy to win support for the long-stalled Chinese-funded Kaliwa Dam Project. The project, which has been shelved for decades, is controversial partly because Duterte asked China to fund it rather than put it to public tender. It is also opposed by indigenous communities, who stand to be displaced, and by NGOs and the Catholic Church, who question its safety.

The task of Medialdea’s delegation will include trying to speed up the delivery of a promised US$211 million loan from the Export-Import Bank to fund the Kaliwa dam.

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez said last week the dam was “absolutely” the solution to Manila’s water shortage and defended the conditions of the loan.

Philippine Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez. Photo: Xiaomei Chen
Philippine Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez. Photo: Xiaomei Chen

He said the bank was giving Manila a preferential rate of 2 per cent per annum for 20 years, with a seven-year grace period; a commitment fee of 0.3 per cent of the loan amount and a management fee of 0.3 per cent of the loan amount.

The delegation will also seek to speed up the delivery of a US$62 million loan pledged by the Export-Import Bank to build the Chico River Pump Irrigation Project in the north of the country.

Dominguez urged the Chinese contractors in both projects to build quickly.

Still, in the Philippines, “quickly” can be a relative term.

China holds the cards as online betting booms in the Philippines

Even as the delegation landed in Beijing, a senate probe into the water crisis was hearing from the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS) administrator Reynaldo Velasco that it would take five years to build the dam, which was still in the consultation stages.

Velasco said that since the dam would be located in the ancestral domain of indigenous communities, “we have to go through a process to be able to get their approval including the agreement [on what displaced families should be paid and their relocation].”

Velasco said if the tribes did not consent, “we will not start the dam”.

Opposition by the tribes has stalled the project for decades.

Graphic: SCMP
Graphic: SCMP

According to Ramcy Astoveza, chief of the Agta tribe, the tribes will never change their mind because “the dam project is a matter of life and death for us. Once we allow the dam inside our natural habitat, what would follow is the death of our tribe”.

Environmental NGOs including the Save Sierra Madre Network Alliance, Alyansa Laban sa Kaliwa Dam, Task Force Sierra Madre and Tribal Centre for Development have warned that, aside from submerging seven villages, the dam project was “within a zone of two active tectonics – the Philippine Fault Zone and the Valley Fault System”.

The winners and losers in Duterte’s China play

Meanwhile, the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines has warned the dam would endanger 100,000 residents downstream of Kaliwa River, particularly during earthquakes and extreme flooding events brought about by climate change.

As Patrick Ty, chief of the MWSS Regulatory Office, said: “With all the problems Kaliwa Dam is facing, it might get delayed.”

Despite such concerns, the government remains optimistic both projects will go ahead. Velasco said the MWSS hoped to start building the Kaliwa dam by August this year. He denied that Manila’s water shortage was artificial and a ploy to get Metro Manila residents to support the China-funded project.

Source: SCMP

19/03/2019

China’s first cloned police dog reports for duty

  • Kunxun, a two-month-old Kunming wolfdog, was born after scientists took the DNA from a ‘one in a thousand’ animal
  • Police hope the programme to clone the force’s best dogs will eventually give it a bigger pool of animals suited to police work

Police say the cloned puppy Kunxun is already showing promise. Photo: Sinogene

Police say the cloned puppy Kunxun is already showing promise. Photo: Sinogene
A cloned puppy, which was bred using DNA from an award-winning police sniffer dog, has started training with a force in the southwest of China.
Earlier this month Kunxun, a two-month-old female, began training at Kunming Police Dog Base in Yunnan province, according to media reports.
The Kunming wolfdog is China’s first cloned police dog and was born after scientists took a DNA sample from a seven-year-old female named Huahuangma, which has won a string of awards for helping to crack multiple cases in the city of Puer.

Since arriving in Kunming, Kunxun has adjusted well to the local environment, the base’s project analyst Wan Jiusheng told Science and Technology Daily.

“She is friendly to humans, sociable and alert,” said Wan, adding that the pup is not scared of the dark or unfamiliar spaces, has a strong sense of smell and can quickly find hidden food.

Kunxun with friend. Photo: Sinogene
Kunxun with friend. Photo: Sinogene

The project was carried out by Yunnan Agricultural University and Sinogene, a Beijing-based company specialising in cloning pets and animals for commercial uses, the newspaper reported.

To produce Kunxun, Huahuangma’s genetic material was extracted and sent to a laboratory in Beijing. An embryo was engineered using an egg from another dog and implanted into a surrogate mother.

“The surrogate was a gentle beagle. To prevent complications and improve the survival rate, we carried out a caesarean section,” Sinogene project technician Liu Xiaojuan told Science and Technology Daily.

Police hope to expand their pool of cloned dogs. Photo: Sinogene
Police hope to expand their pool of cloned dogs. Photo: Sinogene

Beagles are the standard breed used for lab work by the company, which charges a market rate of 380,000 yuan (US$56,000) for each cloned dog.

It can take years to find a police dog like Huahuangma – she was described by Kunming police dog base as “one in a thousand” – and Sinoegene argued that cloning was a better way than breeding of preserving the genetics of such animals.

In one of her more high-profile cases, Huahuangma helped find a crucial piece of evidence – a hotel key – that led to the arrest of a murder suspect in 2016, the company added.

The cloning programme aims to establish a pool of outstanding police dog specimens.

If basic training proves successful, the young Kunming wolf dog will move on to specialist training. Photo: Sinogene
If basic training proves successful, the young Kunming wolf dog will move on to specialist training. Photo: Sinogene

“Currently, police dog cloning is still in the experimental stage. We hope in the next 10 years, once the technology becomes more sophisticated, to mass clone exceptional police dogs,” project analyst Wan said.

Kunxun, whose name contains characters for her breed and “achievement”, is currently undergoing basic training for police puppies.

After six months, the young dogs will enter a “university” and trained to specialise in tracking, drug detection, security or evidence detection.

South Korea was the first country to introduce cloned dogs for police or military use in 2007.

Animal cloning is becoming increasingly prevalent in China for research and commercial uses. Recently, five genetically edited monkeys were cloned to test drugs to treat mental illnesses.

Source: SCMP

19/03/2019

Hong Kong subway trains collide amid new signal system trials

Mass Transit Railway (MTR) trains collide near Central station during a signal system trial in Hong Kong, 18 March 2019Image copyrightREUTERS
Image captionThe collision was said to have involved a “modernised train” and occurred during a signal trial

Two subway trains have collided during a new signal system test in Hong Kong, halting services and threatening travel disruption for millions of commuters.

The incident occurred between the Central and Admiralty stations before the service was open to the public early on Monday morning.

While the trains had no passengers on board, both drivers were taken to hospital.

Rail officials warned that repairs were likely to take “quite a long time”.

Network operator Mass Transit Railway (MTR) said sections of the Tsuen Wan Line had been suspended and urged commuters to avoid the route affected and to use other forms of transport if possible.

MTR Corporation has said a failure with the new signal system was to blame for the crash, Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post newspaper reports.

An investigation has been launched.

Mass Transit Railway (MTR) trains collide near Central station during a signal system trial in Hong Kong, 18 March 2019Image copyrightREUTERS
Image captionNeither of the two trains involved was carrying passengers at the time

Further disruption was caused later on Monday morning when a woman fell on to the tracks at Kowloon Tong station, causing a temporary suspension of service in that area.

Hong Kong’s subway network is used by up to six million people on weekdays, Reuters news agency reports.

Source: The BBC

19/03/2019

Exclusive: Metro kicks off China unit sale, likely to fetch $2 billion valuation – sources

HONG KONG (Reuters) – German wholesaler Metro AG has kicked off the sale of its China operations by calling for bids, in a deal that would value the business at between $1.5 billion (1.1 billion pounds) and $2 billion, two people with direct knowledge of the deal said.

Metro, which owns 95 stores in China and real estate assets in major cities such as Beijing and Shanghai, is planning to offload a majority stake in its China business, said the people.

The sale move is part of a global reorganisation of the wholesaler and comes as China’s wholesale and retail sectors are experiencing disruption from e-commerce players.

Metro’s China business could yet be valued at up to $3 billion, said two separate sources with direct knowledge of the matter.

Potential bidders include electronics retailer Suning Holdings Group, supermarket chain operators Wumart Stores Inc and Yonghui Superstores, according to three of the people.

Private equity firms such as Hillhouse Capital Group and Bain Capital are also studying a potential deal, they added.

Property makes up the bulk of the value in Metro’s China business, the people said, cautioning, however, that there is a large gap between price expectations among buyers and the seller.

A Metro spokeswoman in Germany said the company is in talks with potential partners concerning the further development of its China business but declined to comment on details of its exchanges with potential partners or the sale process.

Bain and Suning declined to comment. Yonghui and Hillhouse did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Calls to Wumart went unanswered.

First-round, non-binding bids are due in the second week of April, said two of the people. Citigroup and JPMorgan are advising Metro, the people said. The banks declined to comment.

Source: Reuters

19/03/2019

Mukesh Ambani: India’s richest man helps his brother avoid jail

Chairman, Managing Director of Reliance Industries Limited Mukesh Ambani, his wife Nita Ambani, brother and Chairman of Reliance Group Anil Ambani and his wife Tina Ambani during the Padma Awards Investiture ceremony at Rashtrapati Bhawan on March 28, 2016 in New Delhi, IndiaImage copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image caption: Mukesh Ambani, left, sits next to his wife Nita Ambani, and Anil Ambani on the right

India’s richest man Mukesh Ambani has paid a debt payment owed by his brother, saving him from spending time in prison.

Anil Ambani faced a prison sentence after a deal between his firm Reliance Communications (RCom) and telecoms giant Ericsson collapsed.

That left his firm owing Ericsson 5.5bn rupees ($80m; £60m), which it failed to pay by a court deadline.

The move marks a new twist a long-running feud between the brothers.

RCom failed to comply with an India Supreme Court order to pay Ericsson the money by 15 December last year.

The court found him guilty of contempt, giving him another four weeks to pay or go to prison.

On Monday, RCom said the debt had been paid.

“My sincere and heartfelt thanks to my respected elder brother, Mukesh, and (his wife) Nita, for standing by me during these trying times, and demonstrating the importance of staying true to our strong family values by extending this timely support,” Anil Ambani said.

The two brothers have long had an acrimonious relationship, fighting over their father’s businesses after he died in 2002 without a will.

The Reliance empire was divided between the two brothers in 2005 after a bitter seven-month feud.

The brothers have fought bruising court battles in the past over natural gas interests.

Mukesh Ambani is worth more than $54bn, according to Bloomberg.

His firm Reliance Industries, whose activities span from oil to telecommunications, is among India’s most valuable companies.

By contrast, Anil Ambani has an estimated net worth of around $300m, Bloomberg said.

The Ambani family made headlines last year with the lavish wedding of Mukesh Ambani’s daughter, Isha Ambani, which featured a performance from US singer Beyoncé

19/03/2019

School buses, patients held up by Indian roadblocks on main Kashmir highway

SRINAGAR (Reuters) – Military roadblocks on Kashmir’s main highway are delaying ambulances carrying patients and leading to confrontations with motorists that occasionally turn physical, residents and medical staff say, as India’s crackdown on separatists in the region causes major disruption to daily life.

Tensions in Kashmir, a mountainous region claimed by both India and Pakistan, have been elevated since a suicide car bomb attack killed 40 Indian paramilitary police in the region on Feb. 14.

The nuclear-armed neighbours, who have fought two wars over the territory, which is divided between them, both launched airstrikes last months, forcing world powers to urge calm.

Tensions between the two countries have temporarily eased. But India has kept up pressure on militant groups on its side of the contested border, boosting its military presence there and arresting hundreds of alleged separatists. Hundreds of thousands of Indian troops patrol the valley, and motorists say security around military convoys has increased delays.

“The school buses were stopped even today,” Var said. “It is harassment. We can’t run schools like this.”

CHEST PAIN

Irfan Ahmad, 45, a resident of Awantipora in South Kashmir, said it took him three hours to take his mother, Sajja Begum, for treatment at a hospital in Srinagar on March 11, a journey that usually takes an hour.

“She was crying with chest pain but who listened, there were long queues everywhere we were stopped”, he said.

Mohammad Yusuf, an ambulance driver who frequently ferries critical patients from nearby Qazigund to hospitals in Srinagar, said commuting on the highway has become increasingly difficult.

“We are stopped (in) five to six places on the way,” he said. “It takes four hours to take patients from Qazigund to Srinagar and normally it hardly takes 70-80 minutes.”

Waqar Ahmad, a doctor at North Kashmir’s main Baramulla hospital, said he faced similar delays making him late for work shifts.

“Every few kilometres we are stopped by troops on the highway,” he said. “They are very aggressive and they don’t listen to us. We feel insecure. Earlier, they would nicely talk to you and now they are abusive. We are stopped in at least five to six places in a 60-kilometre journey. It is a routine now and we feel dejected.”

The hospital’s medical superintendent, Syed Masood, said most of its doctors were now late for work.

“It affects the functioning of the hospital which caters to lakhs (hundreds of thousands) of people,” he said.

SCHOOLS HIT

A rail line intended to link mountainous North Kashmir to the winter capital of Jammu is more than a decade behind schedule.

That means the highway – India’s longest that begins in Srinagar and terminates at the country’s southern tip – is a vital lifeline to Indian-administered Kashmir, a Muslim-majority region where many residents say they feel cut off from the rest of Hindu-majority India.

Some residents also allege that troops have damaged cars during roadblocks.

Khursheed Ahmad, a 23-year-old from South Kashmir, said he was hit by troops carrying batons and had one of his car windows broken at a traffic stop on March 8.

“I was on the way to Srinagar and was stopped by troops, it took me a little while to apply the breaks and two men swooped on me,” he said. “They beat me with batons and smashed one of the window panes.”
Lt General KJS Dhillon, one of India’s top military commanders in the region, denied troops had harassed or assaulted motorists.
“The point about harassment and all, it is not true, it is propaganda,” he said. “I appeal to my civilian friends to please cooperate with the security forces for one and a half minutes.”
Source: Reuters
19/03/2019

Govt asks banks to save Jet Airways, avoid bankruptcy: Report

The government has also nudged its 49 percent-owned National Investment and Infrastructure Fund (NIIF)— created to invest in stalled and new infrastructure projects — to buy a stake in Jet, a separate government source said.

BUSINESS Updated: Mar 19, 2019 15:53 IST

Reuters
Reuters
New Delhi
Jet Airways,Jet bankruptcy,Naresh Goyal
Saddled with more than 1 billion dollars of debt, Jet is struggling to stay aloft.(REUTERS)

The government has asked state-run banks to rescue privately held Jet Airways without pushing it into bankruptcy, as Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeks to avert thousands of job losses weeks before a general election, two people within the administration told Reuters.

The finance ministry has in the past year sought regular updates from the banks, led by State Bank of India (SBI), on Jet’s financial health, the people said. In recent months, the banks have provided weekly updates about a revival plan and also sought government advice, the people added.

“Top officials at the finance ministry seek regular updates on the issue,” said an official at one of Jet’s lenders, who did not want to be identified as discussions are private.

Details of the discussion between the finance ministry and bankers on bailing out Jet have not been previously reported.

New Delhi has urged state-run banks to convert debt into equity and take a stake in Jet in a rare move in India to use taxpayer money to save a struggling private-sector company from bankruptcy. The two people plus one more source, however, said this would be “transitory” and lenders could sell the stakes once Jet revives.

Also read:Civil aviation minister Suresh Prabhu calls emergency meeting on Jet Airways crisis

The government has also nudged its 49 percent-owned National Investment and Infrastructure Fund (NIIF) – created to invest in stalled and new infrastructure projects – to buy a stake in Jet, a separate government source said.

Saddled with more than 1 billion dollars of debt, Jet is struggling to stay aloft. It has delayed payments to banks, suppliers, employees and aircraft lessors – some of which have begun terminating lease deals.

The world’s biggest democracy is gearing up for an election next month and its booming aviation sector, which employs close to a million people, has been one of the job-creation success stories that Modi can point to as he seeks a second term.

It is crucial for India that Jet revives as the fall of its second-largest airline could have “disastrous consequences for the investment climate” in the sector, a top government official told Reuters.

The official is concerned that if Jet collapses it could drive up airfare in a fast-growing market, wiping out efforts to bring low-cost air travel to India’s hinterland.

A chaotic end could also make it more difficult for the government to sell a stake in Air India, at least in the short run. Last year, it failed to sell part of its stake in the indebted carrier which currently relies on taxpayer money.

If the government’s plan for Jet succeeds, then state-run banks including SBI and Punjab National Bank (PNB) as well as NIIF would together own at least a third of the airline until they find a new buyer.

Currently, Abu Dhabi’s Etihad Airways is Jet’s largest shareholder with a 24 percent stake.

India’s finance ministry, SBI, PNB and Jet Airways did not respond to requests for comment.

KINGFISHER’S COLLAPSE

Most companies in Jet’s financial condition would be placed by creditors into India’s new bankruptcy process, two bankers said. However, memories of the chaos sparked by Kingfisher Airlines’ demise in 2012 have prompted the government to seek a more sober road to rescue, they said.

Kingfisher’s bankruptcy caused job losses, lessors lost millions of dollars and banks took massive writedowns.

Putting what is essentially a services provider like Jet through the bankruptcy process would diminish its value because it owns no major assets, unlike a manufacturing company, as most of its planes are leased, said another government official.

Also read: Jet Airways delays interest payments, grounds 4 more planes

If it is pushed into bankruptcy and lessors start pulling even more planes out of service, there would be nothing left for any potential investors, the official said. Already 41 planes have been grounded by lessors in the past three months, leading to flight cancellations.

While on the surface Jet’s future still hangs in the balance with its main shareholder Etihad at loggerheads over the final terms of any deal, behind-the-scenes support from the government means there is likely to be a bailout.

But there are no easy options, one of the sources said, adding that the lenders do not have the expertise to run an airline so they have to decide what to do once they convert their debt into equity.

New Delhi is also backing a proposal for Jet’s founder and Chairman Naresh Goyal to step down if it means saving the airline, another official said. “Saving Jet is not equivalent to saving Goyal,” the official said.

RISING AIRFARE

Jet, with its fleet of 119 planes, once controlled a sixth of India’s domestic aviation market. The 25-year-old airline is also one of only two full-service carriers that flies to international destinations. The other is Air India.

The government ideally wants four to six major airlines to ensure fares are competitive and passengers have greater choice, according to the top government source.

Also read: Not paid salaries for months, Jet Airways pilots seek govt help

India plans to build 100 new airports costing about $60 billion which would need a steady stream of flights to sustain them, and that is possible only if there are enough airlines, a separate official said.

“The investment in these airports will solely depend on operators willing to have regular flights at affordable prices and one operator going bankrupt does not help,” he said.

Law of Unintended Consequences

continuously updated blog about China & India

ChiaHou's Book Reviews

continuously updated blog about China & India

What's wrong with the world; and its economy

continuously updated blog about China & India