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Alitalia agrees Air France-KLM alliance, says source
Alitalia's board agreed to sell a 25 per cent stake to Air France-KLM on Monday, a source close to the Italian carrier said, giving the French airline wider access to a vibrant market after years of intermittent courtship.
Rome: Alitalia's board agreed to sell a 25 per cent stake to Air France-KLM on Monday, a source close to the Italian carrier said, giving the French airline wider access to a vibrant market after years of intermittent courtship.
After a week of frenetic talks with politicians hoping for a last-minute coup for rival Lufthansa, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said time had run out for the German carrier and that Air France-KLM had clinched the deal.
Air France-KLM and Lufthansa had been locked in a battle for more than three months over the stake, which offered a quick avenue to tap into Italy's bustling aviation market that meshes busy business routes in the north with heavy tourist traffic.
The German carrier, which had the open support of Berlusconi, never formally ruled itself out of the running and says it is still in contact with Alitalia, but last week confirmed it did not make a firm offer.
Meeting at its headquarters near Rome's Fiumicino airport on Monday, Alitalia's board agreed to accept Air France-KLM's offer to buy a stake, a source close to the Italian carrier told Reuters. A news conference at 1630 GMT follows.
Air France-KLM is expected to pay more than 300 million euros ($401.8 million) for a 25 per cent stake, with Italian media reporting it could fork out as much as 310 million euros.
The airline, which filed for bankruptcy in August last year, will be formally relaunched on Tuesday as a smaller, regional carrier with fewer staff and a revamped network, under the ownership of the CAI group of Italian investors.
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