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AFP investigates possible Qantas sabotage

written by australianaviation.com.au | November 2, 2011


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A file image of a Qantas 767. (Seth Jaworski)

The saga surrounding Qantas took a new turn Wednesday as the Australian Federal Police confirmed it was investigating the alleged sabotage of a Qantas 767 in Brisbane.

The alleged sabotage was said to relate to the wiring of the inflight entertainment system and occurred prior to Qantas CEO Alan Joyce’s decision to ground all flights over the weekend, stranding tens of thousands of customers amid a protracted labour dispute.

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Union officials denied sabotaging the aircraft, saying the problem likely stemmed from a manufacturing defect. Qantas declined comment, while the AFP said little other than to confirm it was investigating.

By Tuesday Qantas had resumed normal flight schedules and said all passengers stranded over the weekend had been delivered to their destinations. Still, the political fallout over the company’s unprecedented move continued unabated, with the government and opposition trading accusations over how much each side knew ahead of Qantas’s decision to halt flights.

Joyce has also been called to appear before a Senate parliamentary committee to explain the decision.

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Comments (7)

  • Brett

    says:

    probably one of qantas’ maintenance technicians

  • Ron

    says:

    Qantas 767’s have inflight entertainment systems?

  • Jeff

    says:

    I agree with ron.Probably snakes and ladders and pictionary.

  • Tim tom

    says:

    More like noughts and crosses scratched into the back of a headrest.

  • Dane

    says:

    @Ron; They have projectors in various locations and they have the arm-rest audio IFE

  • C

    says:

    This particular aircraft is the very first aircraft to be converted to full
    wi-fi for the IFE system as a trial. There was NO manufacturing fault. Fibre optic cables were CUT.

  • D

    says:

    Not the first instance investigated at that port and not the only airline.

Comments are closed.

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