Lufthansa to Belgian PM: No Plan to Sell Brussels Airlines

BRUSSELS (Reuters) —
A Brussels Airlines Airbus A319-100. (Yannick de Bel)

German airline Lufthansa has no intention of selling its Belgian unit, Brussels Airlines, the head of Lufthansa Carsten Spohr assured Belgian Prime Minister Sophie Wilmès in a letter seen by the Belgian VRT public broadcaster.

Belgian media reported last week that Lufthansa was seeking a 290 million euro ($314.07 million) loan from Belgium to avoid a bankruptcy of Brussels Airlines, but that talks with Finance Minister Alexandre De Croo had been suspended.

“It is important that the group stays together. This provides intangible benefits for our network,” Spohr was quoted by the broadcaster as saying in the letter.

He also said that if Belgium helps Brussels Airlines financially, the money would be used only for the Brussels Airlines, and not in the whole Lufthansa group.

Almost all of Lufthansa’s flights have been grounded by the coronavirus outbreak. Lufthansa is seeking state aid in Germany, Switzerland, Belgium and Austria — all countries where it has airlines, because of the extended duration of the health crisis.

Reuters reported last week that Lufthansa was aiming to finalize a state aid rescue package worth up to 10 billion euros this week, according to people involved.

To Read The Full Story

Are you already a subscriber?
Click to log in!