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Why Air India's turnaround is witnessing turbulence

Updated on: 17 November,2010 09:01 AM IST  | 
Mohit Sharma |

Independent board of directors and executive management in blame game

Why Air India's turnaround is witnessing turbulence

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Independent board of directors and executive management in blame game

Even as the rift between those responsible for the claimed turnaround of the national carrier Air India is widening by the day, allegations are flying high and thick between the independent board of directors and the executive management staff.



The latest feud between the two camps regarding the appointment of some people with 'dubious credentials' as part of the so-called turnaround is turning out to be an interesting contest between the two groups. Documents pertaining to these appointments, which are in the possession of MiD DAY, establish that both the camps knew well how and who are being taken on board.

The fresh controversy surrounds the appointment of Captain Pawan Arora as COO, Air India Charters Limited (AICL), Kamaljeet Rattan as CCO, National Aviation Company Limited (NACIL) and Captain Stephen Sukumar as COT, NACIL.

The documents suggest Chief Operating Officer (COO-NACIL) Gustav Baldauf was appointed by a committee headed by Aviation Secretary MM Nambiar. The posts of Arora, Rattan and Sukumar were sanctioned after a presentation before the independent directors and Ministry of Civil Aviation.
The appointments were later cleared by the HR committee and Air India board.

The documents, containing minutes of the entire appointment procedure, suggest that that Chief Managing Director, NACIL, Arvind Jadhav, who has been facing the flak for appointment of people with "dubious credentials", might not be entirely responsible for it.u00a0 While Jadhav is facing scrutiny for all these new appointments, minutes of the appointment procedure said: "A panel consisting of secretary civil aviation, CMD of NACIL apart from Mr Sajjan Jindal, vice-chairman and MD, Jindal Steel and Mr Uday Kotak, executive vice-chairman and MD, Kotak Mahindra Bank Ltd was formed to select the suitable candidate to the post of Chief Operating Officer-NACIL (Gustav Baldauf)." Jadhav only negotiated the salary with Captain Gustav, for which the panel had empowered him.

The appointments of Arora, Rattan and Sukumar were done by a two-member panel headed by Captain Gustav Baldauf. The panel recommended these three officials to Air India CMD.

The new appointments were indeed recommended during a presentation by Jadhav and Captain Gustav before the Minister for Civil Aviation Praful Patel, Aviation Secretary MM Nambiar, Joint Secretary and Financial Advisor Bharat Bhushan and the 'independent directors' of the board of NACIL on June 28, 2010.

The appointments were cited as part of the strategy and initiatives behind the turnaround plan of the national carrier. Later, a panel comprising Captain Gustav Baldauf and V Srikrishnan, Executive Director (HQ) was appointed to interview the eligible candidates .

Pay Check

Chief Operating Officer (COO-NACIL) Gustav Baldauf


Gross fixed component of 29 thousand Euros per month and gross variable component of 2 lakh Euros payable annually.

Captain Pawan Arora COO-AICL
Fixed component Rs 1.2 crore per year and variable component Rs 30 lakh apart from other perks.
Kamaljeet Rattan as CCO-NACIL

Inclusive salary of Rs 48.76 lakh per annum, excluding car driver benefits and petrol which is paid separately, apart from other perks.

Captain Stephen Sukumar as COT-NACIL
All inclusive salary of 2 lakh Euros, excluding car driver and petrol benefits, which are paid separately apart from other perks.

WHAT'S THE ISSUE?

Earlier this year, independent directors had complained to the Prime Minister's Office over the appointments of Captain Pawan Arora as COO-AICL, Kamaljeet Rattan as CCO-NACIL and Captain Stephen Sukumar as COT-NACIL ruing that they were not consulted on the appointments. The directors from within the company management complained that there was no need to fill these posts from outside and it should have been done in house as all these officers are drawing huge amount of money as salary. The company is running into huge losses and has debt of Rs 40,000 crore.
Above all Pawan Arora's appointment has run into rough weather following adverse report from the government safety panel set up after the Mangalore air crash.
The civil aviation ministry had also reportedly asked the Air India management to reconsider its decision to appoint Air India Express Chief Operating Officer, Pawan Arora, after issues over his safety record and qualifications for the top job came under scrutiny. Arora's name had come under fire after details surfaced that he had allegedly been removed from the position of test pilot by the Directorate General of Civil Aviation, as the appointment was found to be irregular. His subsequent appointment as a flight operations inspector was also scrapped by the regulator.
CMD, NACIL, Arvind Jadhav has been facing the flak that he is responsible for hiring Pawan Arora whereas Jadhav has continuously been maintaining that it was the board's decision.

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