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In this April 23, 2008 file photo, Lufthansa and Alitalia jetliners are parked at the Milan Linate airport in Italy. The Italian daily Corriere della Sera says Lufthansa is preparing a 500 million-euro bid for large parts of bankrupt Italian carrier Alitalia, including the fleet, pilots, air crew and air slots.Antonio Calanni/The Associated Press

German airline Lufthansa has submitted an offer for parts of Alitalia and a plan to reshape Italy's ailing national carrier just days after agreeing to buy some of Air Berlin's assets.

Lufthansa's offer is not for the whole Italian airline, but only for parts of its network, meaning it may not find favour with Rome, which wants to sell Alitalia in one package and avoid a split of its aviation and ground service activities.

Possible job cuts are also likely to stoke resistance to the Lufthansa approach.

Italy had on Friday delayed the sale process, extending to April 30 a deadline to improve the bids which had previously been set for Nov. 5.

The German carrier did not provide details of its offer but said it included plans for what it termed a new Alitalia.

"The offer includes a concept for a newly structured Alitalia with a focused business model ("NewAlitalia"), which could develop long-term economic prospects," it said.

Earlier, Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera reported Lufthansa was offering €500-million ($590-million U.S.) to acquire the planes, airport runway slots and air crew.

Citing three anonymous sources, the paper said Lufthansa has also proposed halving Alitalia's workforce of 12,000 employees and reducing its short– and medium-range flights.

The paper said the offer was likely to be rejected by the state commissioners who are managing the carrier while it is being sold.

LUFTHANSA SPREADS WINGS

The offer from Lufthansa, which also owns Brussels Airlines, Swiss, Austrian and Eurowings, comes after it agreed a deal last week for large parts of Air Berlin, which will see its Eurowings budget unit grow to 210 aircraft from 160.

Cut-throat competition on short-haul routes in Europe has pressured several airlines, with British leisure carrier Monarch also collapsing this month, on top of the administration processes for Air Berlin and Alitalia.

Carriers such as British Airways parent IAG and Norwegian Air Shuttle have said they would be interested in some Monarch airport slots, while easyJet said it is in talks for 25 Air Berlin planes at Berlin Tegel airport.

Alitalia, which has made a profit only a few times in its 70-year history, filed for special administration this year after staff rejected a plan to cut jobs and salaries.

Lufthansa CEO Carsten Spohr said last week he was only interested if a new Alitalia could be created.

Ryanair had also been interested in making a bid, provided Alitalia could be drastically restructured. However, it pulled out to focus on its rostering issues.

On Friday the Italian government also passed an emergency decree to add a further €300-million to the loan of €600-million it made to the loss-making carrier in May and extend the repayment deadline.

Ryanair on Thursday promised its pilots significant improvements in pay and conditions, saying it would exceed rates paid by rivals and improve job security, according to a letter to pilots seen by Reuters. Scarlett Cvitanovich reports.

Reuters

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