The European Commission voiced concern Thursday about Italian plans for a bailout of Alitalia, raising the prospect that EU regulators might block a vital state loan to the ailing airline. "We have doubts about the nature of the measures and we want to have a better understanding of the details," commission spokesman Michele Cercone told reporters in Brussels.
In Dublin, Irish low-cost airline Ryanair urged the Commission to prevent Rome from extending what it described as "unlawful state aid," which it said "makes a mockery of EU state aid rules." "Alitalia has already received over five billion euros in unlawful state aid but the European Commission, as always in the case of flag carriers, turns a blind eye and does nothing," Ryanair said in a statement.
The Italian government on Wednesday gave the Commission, Europe's top competition watchdog, details of a 300-million-euro (480-million-dollar) state loan for Alitalia, insisting that it was being made on market terms. "Italy maintains that the measures are not state aid because the loan is being made available on commercial terms," Cercone said. However "we want to understand if this is a commercial operation or has elements of state aid."
Italy is currently banned from offering outright state aid to the airline because of past bailouts and could be forced to recover the money if EU regulators deem the loan to be illegal state aid.
Alitalia's crisis is fast becoming a source of contention both in Italy and elsewhere in Europe, complicating any rescue and imperilling the airline's future. In a last-ditch effort to save Alitalia, the outgoing Italian government of Prime Minister Romano Prodi agreed Tuesday to extend the emergency loan after Air France-KLM withdrew a take-over offer.
Prodi will hand over to conservative leader Silvio Berlusconi in mid-May following the billionaire's victory in last week's elections during which the airline's crisis loomed large. During the campaign, Berlusconi repeatedly claimed that an all-Italian consortium was in the offing to rescue Alitalia but none has so far materialised.
Air France-KLM left the negotiating table on April 2 after the unions demanded that all Alitalia operations be kept intact - something Europe's largest airline had already ruled out. Air France-KLM's definitive withdrawal, ending three weeks of speculation over whether it might reconsider, left the cash-strapped airline few options but to contemplate bankruptcy or receivership.
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