Qantas boss retires early after allegations the Australian airline sold tickets for canceled flights
The boss of Australian airline Qantas says he will leave his job immediately โ two months earlier than planned โ following a series of embarrassing revelations about the company, including allegations it sold tickets for flights that had already been canceled.
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Qantas expects to start international flights in October
(AP Photo/Rick Rycroft, File)CANBERRA โ Qantas Airways does not expect to resume international travel apart from New Zealand until late October after the Australian population is vaccinated for COVID-19, the airlineโs chief executive said on Thursday. The Sydney-based airline had been selling seats on international flights from July 1. But there has been a huge surge in COVID-19 cases around the world since those July flights went on sale in early January, Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce said. Qantas still expected a โmaterial increaseโ in flights between Australia and New Zealand by July, Joyce said. AdQantas on Thursday posted a 1.47 billion Australian dollar ($1.17 billion) statutory loss for the six months through December and a AU$6.9 billion ($5.5 billion) fall in revenue due to pandemic restrictions.
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Qantas expects global travel won't resume until mid-2021
Qantas Chief Executive Officer Alan Joyce walks through the airline's headquarters following a results announcement in Sydney, Thursday, Aug. 20, 2020. Qantas Airways announced that the pandemic cost it 4 billion Australian dollars ($2.9 billion) in revenue in the last fiscal year and warned that international travel won't resume before mid 2021. (Dean Lewins/AAP Image via AP)CANBERRA Qantas Airways said Thursday the pandemic cost it 4 billion Australian dollars ($2.9 billion) in revenue in the last fiscal year and warned that international travel won't resume before mid-2021. The airline recorded a AU$771 million ($554 million) pre-tax profit in the first half of the fiscal year before the pandemic struck. Joyce said Qantas was in a better financial position than many airlines to survive the pandemic.
Qantas grounds 3 Boeing 737s due to hairline cracks
CANBERRA Australian airline Qantas Airways said Friday that it grounded three of its Boeing 737s over hairline cracks in wing structures but expects the planes to be repaired and flying again before the end of the year. American, United and Delta representatives said Friday that inspections have turned up none of the structural cracks in their NGs. Virgin said on Friday it had inspected 19 of its 737s and found no cracks. Association secretary Steve Purvinas on Friday maintained his call for all Qantas 737s to be grounded. The hairline cracks on older 737s were discovered as Boeing works to get its newer 737 Max jets back in the air.