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Alitalia airline’s planes parked at Rome’s Fiumicino airport yesterday. Alitalia, which has been stacking up losses for years, was placed in administration. Image Credit: AFP

Rome: A strike at Italian carrier Alitalia, placed in administration earlier this month, grounded 200 flights Sunday, the airline said, adding it managed to reassign some 80 per cent of passengers affected.

Alitalia, which has been stacking up losses for years, was placed in administration on May 2 at the demand of shareholders after staff rejected a €2 billion (Dh8.2 billion, $2.3 billion) rescue plan involving pay cuts and 1,700 job losses.

Having ruled out nationalisation, the Italian government is looking for a bidder for the company, in which UAE carrier Etihad Airways has a 49 per cent stake.

Sunday’s strike, which affected domestic and international flights, came with talks underway on conditions surrounding the shedding announced midweek of 1,358 of the airline’s 12,500 staff.

At the start of May the government agreed a €600 millionbridging loan to keep Alitalia’s planes flying for around six months while administrators decide whether to sell part or all of the company or liquidate it.

Minister of Economic Development Carlo Calenda ruled out nationalisation earlier this month saying Italian citizens “have already paid €7.5 billion over the past few years in attempts to rescue Alitalia.”

Despite a wave of fare promotions, Alitalia has been struggling amid the uncertainty over its future as customers increasingly look to rival carriers.