Carrier which is vital to Siberian towns and cities faces bankruptcy lawsuit as debt claims mount.
UTair - the third biggest airline in Russia - has embarked on a programme to cut is costs by around $180 million within a year. Picture: Utair Corporate
The Russian government is considering financial aid to UTair, said Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich. 'We are discussing this,' he said.
The airline's problems come amid a serious fall in the value of the rouble amid sinking oil prices and Western sanctions. Alfa-Bank submitted four new unpaid debt claims, with one claim exceeding $405,000, against UTair and UTair-Leasing to the Moscow Arbitration Court.
This follows earlier claims for $11.8 million in unpaid debt.
Several courts have registered a bankruptcy petition against the airline by Avialeasing, as well as debt claims by YUGRA SPb, airports of Yekaterinburg, Perm, and Samara.
UTair - the third biggest airline in Russia - has embarked on a programme to cut is costs by around $180 million within a year.
Based in Khanty-Mansiysk, the airline is a crucial lifeline to several Siberian regions.
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