As millions of Australians know and feel acutely, airfares today stand at record highs. Indeed, they are a key input of our rampant consumer price inflation. The national carrier, Qantas, is (happily for them) unable to sustain pre-COVID international capacity until FY25 due to a lack of available aircraft. In the meantime, it’s printing super-profit margins on its international flights (and domestic flights for that matter).
Yet, the Albanese government has just refused the application of Qatar Airways to operate 28 new flights each week between Doha and Sydney/Melbourne.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese with Qantas CEO Alan Joyce at the airline’s 100th gala dinner in March. Getty
The NSW and Victorian governments supported Qatar’s new flights, as did the federal opposition,
Trade Minister Don Farrell,
the airports, travel agents and tourism bodies. To say nothing of Australian consumers, whose interests are of no interest to government ministers in the thrall of the Qantas influence machine.
In yet another flawless turn of luck for Qantas, the government appears to have quite cynically conflated Qatar Airways’ air rights with an incident three years ago at Doha Airport when five Australian women were forced to undergo grossly invasive searches by Qatari police.
Nobody is minimising that abomination, which is now the subject of a class action, but since when does the misconduct of police have any place in the consideration of market access for an airline? Presumably since it became the only pretence the government could contrive of.
What should have been taken into account by the Australian government is that Qatar Airways was one of only two airlines (the other was US carrier United) to maintain uninterrupted flights to Australia throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, repatriating tens of thousands of Australians through 2020 and 2021, long after Qantas had packed up and gone home. Throughout that period, of course, Qantas ensured the news cameras were always rolling on its occasional “rescue flights”, all paid for by the Department of Foreign Affairs.
Since its invention as a public company, Qantas has been a skilled prosecutor of whispering campaigns against its enemies foreign and domestic. It is the dirtiest player in the game. In Canberra, Qantas was briefing MPs on human rights abuses in the United Arab Emirates right up to the moment it jumped into bed with Emirates and started flying to Dubai itself.