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Lauda says Lufthansa wants to ‘destroy’ Niki airline

By AFP
17 December 2017   |   1:33 pm
Austrian former racing driver Niki Lauda on Sunday accused German carrier Lufthansa of trying to "destroy" the Niki airline which he founded.Niki formerly a unit of now bankrupt Air Berlin, and most recently operated by Lufthansa was grounded last Wednesday after applying to open insolvency proceedings.

This file photo taken on April 14, 2017 shows Niki Lauda, the three-time Formula 1 World Champion, and founder of Air Berlin’s Austrian subsidiary Niki, attending the Formula One Bahrain Grand Prix at the Sakhir circuit in the desert south of the Bahrain’s capital, Manama. Niki Lauda said on December 13, 2017 that he was still interested to take over Niki airline, that he founded. Niki faced insolvency and its planes being grounded as Lufthansa gave up on plans to buy it from bankrupt Air Berlin in the face of competition concerns from the European Commission.ANDREJ ISAKOVIC / AFP

Austrian former racing driver Niki Lauda on Sunday accused German carrier Lufthansa of trying to “destroy” the Niki airline which he founded.Niki formerly a unit of now bankrupt Air Berlin, and most recently operated by Lufthansa was grounded last Wednesday after applying to open insolvency proceedings.

The move came after Lufthansa abandoned plans to buy Niki, a holiday airline with 21 aircraft, together with large parts of Air Berlin because of EU competition concerns.

Lauda, 68, a former Formula One champion, had said last week he was potentially interested in again acquiring the airline he sold to Air Berlin in 2011.

But he has now charged that Lufthansa was effectively blocking the sale of Niki because it “wants to destroy” it, in comments to Bild am Sonntag newspaper.

Under EU rules Lufthansa would have to hand the leased aircraft to a potential investor, but the report said it had bought up many of its aircraft.

“Without aircraft, the airline has no value,” Lauda said.

“If there is no new investor, the take-off and landing slots are divided among the remaining airlines at the respective airports.

“That’s how Lufthansa gets what it wants, and for free.”

A Lufthansa spokesman denied the claim and told the newspaper the airline was in compliance with the rules.

Air Berlin triggered bankruptcy proceedings in August after losing a cash lifeline from its biggest shareholder, Etihad Airways, and was grounded in October.

The European Commission said Wednesday that Lufthansa’s offer to buy 81 aircraft from Air Berlin’s 140-plane fleet plus Niki for 210 million euros ($250 million) posed “clear risks to Austrian, German and Swiss consumers and to effective competition”.

In Germany, complaints have multiplied that Lufthansa had hiked ticket prices since the demise of the country’s second biggest airline.

There had been “a significant increase in complaints about ticket prices,” the head of the consumer protection federation, Klaus Mueller, told national news agency DPA.

“We see that many people are paying a lot more than they used to,” he said.

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