Qatar Airways passengers on diverted flights all put on new flights within 24 hours, CEO says
FILE PHOTO: People sit at Hamad International Airport after Qatar reopened its airspace following a brief closure in the wake of Iran's missile attack on Al Udeid Air Base on Monday, in Doha, Qatar, June 24, 2025. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
Qatar Airways passengers on diverted flights all put on new flights within 24 hours, CEO says
DUBAI - Qatar Airways said on Wednesday that all of the roughly 20,000 passengers who were on flights that were diverted on Monday night after Iran fired missiles towards a U.S. military base in the Gulf country were put on new flights within 24 hours.
Iran launched a missile attack on Al Udeid Air Base in Doha after the U.S. joined Israel's attacks on Iranian nuclear sites, threatening a further escalation in regional tensions before a ceasefire between Iran and Israel was announced.
The attack forced Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain to shut their airspace temporarily while Dubai's two airports in the United Arab Emirates briefly halted operations.
The closures created a backlog of thousands of passengers at Doha's Hamad International Airport who queued for hours, facing long delays and flight cancellations.
"All passengers from diverted flights — approximately 20,000 in total — were cleared within 24 hours," Qatar Airways CEO Badr Mohammed Al-Meer said in an open letter posted on X. "More than 11,000 resumed their journeys during the morning wave on 24 June, with the remainder departing through the evening wave and morning bank on 25 June. As of today, there are no passengers from diverted flights left stranded."
Traffic at the airport on Wednesday was regular with minimal delays and no crowds, according to a Reuters witness.
Al-Meer said that at the time of the attack, over 90 Qatar Airways flights heading to Doha "were forced to divert immediately" while more than 10,000 passengers were already in transit at Doha's airport.
The airline, which carried just over 43 million passengers in the year to the end of March, activated its business continuity plans, increasing capacity to destinations with high volumes of displaced passengers, in response to the turmoil following the attack, he added. REUTERS
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Business Times
12 minutes ago
- Business Times
North Korea opens landmark coastal Wonsan tourist zone
[SEOUL] North Korea has completed construction of a massive tourist zone on its east coast, state media reported on Thursday, a key project driven by leader Kim Jong Un for years to promote tourism. With 'great satisfaction', Kim attended an inaugural ceremony for the Wonsan Kalma coastal tourist area that could accommodate about 20,000 visitors and said the country would build more large-scale tourist zones swiftly, KCNA news agency said. Kim has been rebuilding the seaside city of Wonsan, a vacation destination for locals, to turn it into a billion-dollar tourist hotspot. Development plans for Wonsan have mushroomed since they were first announced in 2014. However, while tourism is one of a narrow range of cash sources for North Korea not targeted by United Nations sanctions, the reclusive state did not have a major foreign partner for the Wonsan project against the backdrop of sanctions over its weapons programmes. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and his daughter Kim Ju Ae walk inside a hotel during a ceremony to celebrate the completion of the Wonsan Kalma Coastal Tourist Zone, Wonsan, North Korea, June 24, 2025. PHOTO: REUTERS The tourist zone will open for domestic guests from July 1, KCNA said, without mentioning foreign tourists. North Korea sealed its borders in 2020 at the start of the pandemic but has been slowly lifting restrictions since 2023. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up It has allowed Russian tourist groups into the country but its capital and other parts of the country remain closed to regular tourism, though in April it held a marathon event hosting foreign runners. Moscow and Pyongyang, both economically and politically isolated, have drawn closer as North Korea has deployed thousands of troops and supplied ammunition, artillery and missiles for Russia's Ukraine war. The Russian ambassador to North Korea and embassy staff were invited as special guests for the Wonsan ceremony, according to KCNA. The two countries have agreed to expand cooperation on tourism, restarting a direct passenger train service between their capitals for the first time since 2020. Kim Jong Un expressed belief that the wave of the happiness to be raised in the Wonsan Kalma coastal tourist area would enhance its attractive name as a world-level tourist cultural resort', KCNA said. REUTERS

Straits Times
19 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Bumble to lay off 30% of global workforce as online dating industry struggles
Online dating firms have struggled in recent years to keep their audiences, especially Gen Z users. PHOTO: REUTERS Bumble to lay off 30% of global workforce as online dating industry struggles Bengaluru - Bumble said on June 25 it would lay off nearly a third of its workforce, the latest cuts in the dating app industry as firms struggle to develop features that will keep users spending amid economic uncertainty. The move, which will affect 240 roles, or 30 per cent of Bumble's staff, is part of a broader effort to revamp the platform as the industry grapples with declining user engagement. Rival Match also announced a 13 per cent workforce reduction in May. Shares of Bumble jumped 25 per cent on the news, but they are still down by about a fifth for the year. The company's market value has shrunk to a little over US$500 million (S$639 million) from a peak of around US$15 billion when it went public in 2021, LSEG data shows. Online dating firms have struggled in recent years to keep their audiences, especially Gen Z users, swiping on their apps, leading to management overhauls and pressure from activist investors. Match in February appointed Spencer Rascoff as its new chief executive officer, signalling a fresh direction for the company. For Bumble, the cuts come three months after founder Whitney Wolfe Herd reassumed the role of CEO, promising the company's performance by focusing on match-making quality. In an early sign the efforts were working, Bumble on June 25 raised its second-quarter revenue forecast to a range of US$244 million to US$249 million, up from the prior view of US$235 million to US$243 million. The company also met Wall Street expectations for first-quarter revenue in May even as it posted a 7 per cent decline. Bumble expects to save about US$40 million of annual costs from the layoffs, which it plans to reinvest in initiatives such as product and technology development. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
19 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Meta fends off authors' US copyright lawsuit over AI
The judge said the authors had not presented enough evidence that Meta's AI would dilute the market for their work. PHOTO: REUTERS SAN FRANCISCO - A federal judge ruled on June 25 for Meta Platforms against a group of authors who had argued that its use of their books without permission to train its artificial intelligence system infringed their copyrights. US District Judge Vince Chhabria, in San Francisco, said in his decision that the authors had not presented enough evidence that Meta's AI would dilute the market for their work to show that the company's conduct was illegal under US copyright law. Mr Chhabria also said, however, that using copyrighted work without permission to train AI would be unlawful in 'many circumstances', splitting with another federal judge in San Francisco who found on June 23 in a separate lawsuit that Anthropic's AI training made 'fair use' of copyrighted materials. 'This ruling does not stand for the proposition that Meta's use of copyrighted materials to train its language models is lawful,' Mr Chhabria said. 'It stands only for the proposition that these plaintiffs made the wrong arguments and failed to develop a record in support of the right one.' A spokesperson for the authors' law firm Boies Schiller Flexner said that it disagreed with the judge's decision to rule for Meta despite the 'undisputed record' of the company's 'historically unprecedented pirating of copyrighted works'. A Meta spokesperson said the company appreciated the decision and called fair use a 'vital legal framework' for building 'transformative' AI technology. The authors sued Meta in 2023, arguing the company misused pirated versions of their books to train its AI system Llama without permission or compensation. The lawsuit is one of several copyright cases brought by writers, news outlets and other copyright owners against companies including OpenAI, Microsoft and Anthropic over their AI training. The legal doctrine of fair use allows the use of copyrighted works without the copyright owner's permission in some circumstances. It is a key defence for the tech companies. Mr Chhabria's decision is the second in the US to address fair use in the context of generative AI, following US District Judge William Alsup's ruling in the Anthropic case. AI companies argue their systems make fair use of copyrighted material by studying it to learn to create new, transformative content, and that being forced to pay copyright holders for their work could hamstring the burgeoning AI industry. Copyright owners say AI companies unlawfully copy their work to generate competing content that threatens their livelihoods. Mr Chhabria expressed sympathy for that argument during a hearing in May, which he reiterated on June 25. The judge said generative AI had the potential to flood the market with endless images, songs, articles and books using a tiny fraction of the time and creativity that would otherwise be required to create them. 'So by training generative AI models with copyrighted works, companies are creating something that often will dramatically undermine the market for those works, and thus dramatically undermine the incentive for human beings to create things the old-fashioned way,' Mr Chhabria said. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.