Colombian flag carrier, Avianca, has filed for bankruptcy protection in a US court following the grounding of its flight operations due to the COVID-19 pandemic, a media report said on Monday.
The carrier is the second-largest in Latin America, but its passenger operations have been halted since March, reports the BBC.
In a statement on Sunday, the airline said the pandemic had cut more than 80 per cent of its income, and it was struggling with high fixed costs.
The firm said it had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in a court in New York. The process postpones a US company''s obligations to its creditors, giving it time to reorganise its debts or sell parts of the business.
If it fails to come out of bankruptcy, Avianca will be the first major airline to go under amid the pandemic.
In the sttatement, Chief executive Anko van der Werff said the move was needed to ensure the New York-listed airline emerge as a "better, more efficient airline that operates for many more years".
More than 140 of its aircraft have been grounded since Colombian President Ivan Duque closed the country''s airspace in March. Most of its 20,000 employees have been put on unpaid leave.
Behind KLM, Avianca is the second-longest continually running airline in the world.
The coronavirus pandemic has dealt a huge blow to the international aviation industry, as governments impose travel restrictions and confinement measures, said the BBC reported.
Global air travel has fallen by 90 per cent, according to the International Air Transport Association.
The body predicts Latin American airlines will lose $15 billion in revenues this year - the biggest drop in the industry''s history.
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