Air Mauritius has exited voluntary administration and is increasing flight capacity.
The government of the Republic of Mauritius is injecting Rs 12 billion (US$280million) into Air Mauritius via a loan to provide long term stability for the company as international air travel rebuilds following the COVID-19 pandemic.
Air Mauritius is a strategic national asset central to the government’s tourism and investment strategy and provides Mauritius with its own cargo and passenger connectivity to meet market demands.
The new loan arrangement was overwhelmingly supported by Air Mauritius’ creditors.
Ken Arian, CEO of Airports Holdings Limited, the parent company of Air Mauritius said, “This new financial arrangement provides Air Mauritius with the stability to rebuild and play a central role in the government’s economic development and tourism plans.”
“It is a vote of confidence in our staff and provides them and our tourism industry with reassurance for the future.”
“Air Mauritius is an iconic global brand and will continue to provide short and long-haul cargo and passenger connectivity to some of our most important global markets.”
Cargo and passenger flights will operate between Mauritius and Paris, London, Johannesburg, Mumbai, Antananarivo and Reunion with connecting services available globally.
Additional capacity and international routes will be added to meet demand.
Air Mauritius expects Hong Kong, Kuala Lumpur and Perth to be introduced at a later date. Domestic services to and from Rodrigues will resume in November 2021.