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    HK budget airline goes into liquidation


    AFP, HONG KONG
    Thursday, Apr 10, 2008, Page 10

    Hong Kong budget airline Oasis stopped flying yesterday and announced it had gone into liquidation, just 18 months after it first took to the skies with eye-popping low fares.

    At a brief news conference, chief executive Stephen Miller gave no explanation for the shutdown, which comes amid soaring fuel costs that have recently forced the closure of other carriers worldwide.

    The move left an unknown number of passengers stranded in Hong Kong and the airline’s two destinations, London and Vancouver.

    “It is with great regret that Oasis Hong Kong Airlines has today voluntarily applied to the Hong Kong court to appoint a provisional liquidator,” Miller said. “We have therefore suspended all passenger services with immediate effect.”

    He said financial services group KPMG had been appointed as liquidator, and that they would now be seeking partners.

    “We are very confident that somebody will come forward,” he said.

    Miller then congratulated the staff of Oasis and walked out of the briefing.

    cancelations

    All flights on Oasis departing from Hong Kong yesterday were canceled, and travelers holding tickets were given a hotline number to contact.

    The Hong Kong Economic Times earlier reported what it called a “rumor” that the company was struggling under debts of up to HK$1 billion (US$128 million).

    Eddie Middleton, KPMG’s partner in charge of restructuring services in Hong Kong, told reporters he had been first informed of a problem on Tuesday night and was appointed by the court yesterday.

    Middleton was not able to say why the company was in trouble and had not yet seen the carrier’s accounts.

    He said his immediate priority was to help passengers who were stranded by the cancelation of flights or who had already bought tickets for future travel.

    Oasis launched in October 2006, offering one-way Hong Kong to London pre-tax fares of HK$1,000. It later added a link to the western Canadian city of Vancouver.

    The company, which employs just under 700 staff, had been operating daily between Hong Kong and London, and six times a week between Hong Kong and Vancouver, with plans to open additional routes to Europe and North America.

    founders

    The company was founded by the husband-and-wife team of Raymond and Priscilla Lee, who said in an interview last year with Agence France-Presse that the Oasis model would succeed because their planes spent less time on the ground.

    But Oasis suffered from a bad take-off when its maiden voyage was delayed 30 hours after Russia withdrew permission to fly over its airspace at the last minute.

    However, their model shook up the already competitive industry.

    Rivals, including Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific, were forced to lower fares to compete with the super-cheap offers.

    Oasis was part of the push for low-cost flights that has been so successful in the European market and, alongside Malaysian-based AirAsiaX, the firm tried to create a long-haul version of the cheap model.

    Despite the early setbacks, they managed to attract a US$30 million investment by Hong Kong-based asset management firm Value Partners last year.

    The money was going to be used to buy 14 more second-hand Boeing aircraft to bolster the current fleet of five, whose average age is 10 years old, executives said.

    Value Partners said in a statement yesterday it believed its investment was well-protected.


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