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Manchester, Stansted and East Midlands Airports announce "enforced annual leave, reduced working hours, and temporary pay cuts and lay-offs"

It comes as airlines bring in drastic measures in response to massive drop in demand due to coronavirus

Jet2 at East Midlands Airport

The group behind three of Britain’s busiest airports has announced drastic cost-cutting measures, including temporary job cuts, in a bid to secure its future during the coronavirus pandemic.

At the end of a day that saw stock markets tumble once again and Prime Minster Boris Johnson tell the nation to work from home if they can, Manchester Airport’s Group said it was bringing in “enforced annual leave, reduced working hours, temporary pay cuts and temporary lay-offs”.

It employs 5,000 people.

Senior management at the £890 million turnover group, which owns Manchester, East Midlands and Stansted Airports, have also taken a cut in pay.

It comes as airlines bring in their own strict measures in response to a drop in demand.

Global travel restrictions combined with a huge fall in passengers have led to as many as 80 per cent of flights being grounded.

"Critical time" - Manchester Airports Group chief executive Charlie Cornish

Virgin Atlantic staff have been asked to take eight weeks unpaid leave over the next three months to help safeguard the firm during the outbreak and save jobs – a move supported by unions BALPA and UNITE, according to its statement.

Other cost-cutting included offering all staff a "one-time voluntary severance package".