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Rover today

To: triumphs@autox.team.net
Subject: Rover today
From: GuyotLeonF@aol.com
Date: Mon, 1 May 2000 15:34:33 EDT
By Bob Roberts, Deputy Political Editor, PA News 

The Government came under pressure today to use the £22 billion raised from 
the sale of mobile phone licences to help save Rover. 

General Secretary of the MSF union Roger Lyons said Trade and Industry 
Secretary Stephen Byers and Prime Minister Tony Blair were committed to 
helping Rover. 

But speaking on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, Mr Lyons said there was now a 
need for the Government to be "creative" in finding ways of financially 
supporting Rover within European Union rules. 

He said: "BMW must be induced to do the right thing and Stephen Byers and the 
Cabinet do have the £22 billion windfall from the sale of the mobile phone 
contracts." 

The £22 billion was raised from the sale of licences for the so-called "third 
generation" of mobile phones last week. 

Under EU rules there are restrictions preventing Governments from giving 
national industries an unfair advantage through subsidies. 

But Governments are allowed to support research and development and training 
schemes with Treasury cash. 

Speaking ahead of negotiations between BMW and the Phoenix bid tomorrow, Mr 
Lyons added: "A great wave of relief has crossed the Midlands and elsewhere 
since Alchemy pulled out. 

"Now we have got a situation where there is a serious option and we want 
everyone now to have a united resolve to work with it." 

The Phoenix consortium hoping to buy Rover Cars was spending today poring 
over financial details on the company ready for tomorrow's crucial meeting 
with BMW chiefs. 

Phoenix, headed by former Rover executive John Towers, was given key 
documents by BMW yesterday which it said would allow it to press ahead with 
its rescue plan. 

Thousands of jobs at Rover's Longbridge plant and at supplier companies in 
the region will depend on the outcome of Phoenix's talks with Rover's German 
owners. 

BMW agreed to meet the consortium after negotiations with venture capitalist 
firm Alchemy collapsed on Friday. 

Alchemy had been planning sweeping redundancies at Rover and the collapse of 
talks was greeted with cheers by many Rover workers. 

But BMW has since warned that if a new deal is not reached within a month it 
will have no alternative other than to close the UK company, which is thought 
to be losing the German firm up to £2 million a day. 


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