
British Airways will use Qatar Airways planes and crew to fly all its passengers to their destinations during a planned two-week strike by some cabin crew, Willie Walsh, head of BA’s parent company, said on Thursday.
“I’ll be pleased to say that those airplanes will fly and all of the British Airways passengers who are booked to fly with us over the next couple of weeks will be flying,” Walsh told reporters in Brussels on Thursday when asked if the application to use the planes had been successful.
The CAA would not confirm that BAs application had been approved and said it was still processing it.
“Under European regulations specific approval is required for an EU airline, such as British Airways, to wet lease aircraft from an airline based outside of Europe,” a spokesman for the CAA said in a statement.
“The UK Department for Transport will approve or reject the application taking into account advice from the Civil Aviation Authority.”
A “wet-leasing” deal would mean that BA pays Qatar to use its aircraft and crew for the two-week period.
The deal could help Qatar make more use of its planes after its operations were disrupted by a boycott from four Arab nations, forcing it to seek out other destinations on which to use its planes.
Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt cut ties with Qatar on June 5 in the worst diplomatic crisis in the region in years.
BA and Qatar Airways have close ties. Both are partners in the OneWorld alliance and code share on certain flights, while the Doha-based carrier owns a 20 percent stake in BA parent
International Airlines Group.