Business
Antigua & Barbuda opposes plans to establish rival airline to LIAT
Antigua & bARBUDA’s Prime Minister Gaston Browne says he will not support plans to establish a rival airline to the financially troubled Leeward Islands Air Transport (LIAT).
Browne said he is aware that Antigua & Barbuda does not have the shareholding majority in LIAT to stop any moves by the Barbados government to establish the new airline.
“Well I imagine we don’t have any legal basis on which to stop them, we just hope at the end of the day, commonsense, reasonableness, equity will prevail.
“My understanding is that Barbados is considering forming a new airline and to collapse LIAT and it is unfortunate that they are now seeking to take that position. I have actually seen a proposal in which Barbados is now seeking to literally collapse LIAT to take several of the planes and to form the new airline,” Browne said on state-owned ABS Television.
LIAT shareholder governments are Antigua & Barbuda, Barbados, Dominica and St Vincent & the Grenadines. Browne said the move to establish the new airline is contrary to the spirit of Caribbean integration.
“I do not think that this in the spirit of good relations and I just hope that the other shareholder governments will understand that look at the end of the day we all share common space in the OECS and CARICOM, we are our brothers keepers and for us to take those extremist positions in order to promote whatever national agendas we may have is totally unacceptable,” he added.
Antigua & Barbuda has already voiced its opposition to plans to relocate the base of the airline from Antigua & Barbuda to Barbados.
But St Vincent & the Grenadines Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves said that the decision taken at a meeting in Bridgetown earlier this year was based on the realities of LIAT.
Browne said that the relocation would result in job losses and negatively affect his country’s economy. -(CMC)
