Brutal Insult – Staff Families Are Treated As ‘Worth Less’ By Malaysia Airlines – EXCLUSIVE |
Brutal Insult – Staff Families Are Treated As ‘Worth Less’ By Malaysia Airlines – EXCLUSIVE Posted: 24 Mar 2014 08:05 AM PDT After two weeks of disastrous mishandling of events it appears that Malaysian Airlines has now committed a further act of gross insensitivity, according to exclusive information obtained by Sarawak Report. Family members of the crew have confided they have been approached by the airline with the offer of 'hardship money' in recognition of the appalling situation involving their closest relatives. However, they claim it is only half the sum that has been offered to families of passengers on board. Some of the relatives were reportedly so upset that they told officials to keep the money, which is being presented by the airline as a goodwill payment.
Another close relative of one of the family members, who have been kept separately from passenger relatives in the Marriot Hotel in Kuala Lumpur, explained to Sarawak Report that the money was being presented as a one-off payment, as a form of hardship allowance, whist the search and rescue is being carried out.
Time for more transparency from Malaysia Airlines So far Malaysia Airlines staff have failed to deny any of these concerns, say relatives of the crew. Yet, if the information that they have been offered less is untrue, then the surely airline should have spared no time in reassuring them that are being treated equally? Instead, it has emerged that airline official, who are closely managing the cabin staff relatives in their segregated hotel, have resorted to warnings about confidentiality and apparent threats. Sarawak Report has learnt that at a briefing earlier this evening airline officials warned the relatives that they had detected that there have been 'discussions' about this sensitive matter. The officials went on to tell the relatives that the hardship payments have been volunteered by the airline as a matter of 'goodwill' and that they are a 'confidential matter', which should not be spoken about. The relatives were then individually warned by the airline's 'Care Advisors' that it would not do them any good to 'turn against' the company, which was trying to help them, because "at the end of the day it is the company that will be looking after them". This has struck fear amongst a good number of the relatives, Sarawak Report understands, because of the thinly veiled threat implied against their future financial well-being. This is especially so after tonight's dreadful announcement by the Prime Minister Najib Razak that the plane is now officially being declared as lost and the passengers deceased. UK£67million (RM365million) insurance was paid to airline for hardship money Under these painful and upsetting circumstances such a patronising and controlling stance by the airline appears scarce credible, as does the demand for secrecy over payments made to relatives. The world's press has already covered the fact that insurers have forked out £67million to the airline in order to cover hardship payments, meaning the 'goodwill' payments so far remain far short of the sums to which relatives ought to be eventually entitled. With 239 affected passengers each family should be looking at a sum of around £1.5million by these sums alone. So, why the demands for confidentiality and self-serving claims about 'generous goodwill' by the airline? Given the airline's performance so far it is highly unlikely that secrecy and confidentiality in this matter is in any of the relatives interests. Nor are bullying and threats acceptable towards people who are suffering so badly as a result of the airline's failure to detect its own missing airplane. Malaysia Airlines should say sorry to the relatives and come clean on this issue. Have they or have they not differentiated in their payments to different families so far and if so why? Sign up to receive regular updates from Sarawak Report |
You are subscribed to email updates from Sarawak Report To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 20 West Kinzie, Chicago IL USA 60610 |