LONDON, Sept 24 (Reuters) - The British government decided
there was no point bailing out Thomas Cook as it would have been
a waste of taxpayers' money to throw good money into a business
that was not meeting the needs of its customers, the business
minister said on Tuesday.
"There are all sorts of rumours flying, the fact is that 200
million was even an underestimate of what Thomas Cook would have
needed just for the very short term, for the next week or two,"
Business Secretary Andrea Leadsom told Sky News.
"Thomas Cook is sitting on trying to service 1.7 billion
pounds of debt, and it would have been a waste of taxpayers'
money to be throwing good money after bad," she said.
Leadsom said she had asked the insolvency service to bring
forward their inquiry into the directors and the events leading
up to the collapse, "just to make sure whether there has been in
fact any wrongdoing, anything that could have been done
differently that could have averted this disaster."
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge and Paul Sandle; editing by
James Davey)