Qatar Airways got €1.7bn government lifeline after losses widened

Several countries have stepped in to help airlines hammered by the coronavirus crisis

Qatar Airways received a 7.3 billion riyal (€1.7 billion) lifeline from the Qatar government after losing 7 billion riyal in the year to March 31st, the state-owned group disclosed on Sunday.

Several countries, including the United States, have stepped in to help airlines hammered by the coronavirus crisis that brought global travel to a near-halt earlier this year. The lifeline was provided to Qatar Airways after annual losses exceeded 50 per cent of share capital and was later converted into new shares, said the airline's financial statement.

Qatar Airways, which has slashed jobs and delayed new aircraft deliveries due to the pandemic, flagged in March that it would seek state support but had not until now disclosed the funding.

The airline said the 2019-20 financial year had been one of the most difficult in its nearly three-decade history, with losses widening from a restated 4.5 billion riyal loss in the previous year.

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The airline saw revenue increase 6.5 per cent to 51.1 million riyal. Passengers carried rose 10 per cent to 32.4 million. The true impact of the crisis on Qatar Airways is unclear as global lockdowns continued beyond its financial year-end.

Qatar Airways Group includes the airline, management of Qatar's international airport and other aviation assets. Since mid-2017, the airline has been banned from the airspace of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates due to a regional political dispute that forces it to fly longer routes. It is also banned from Egyptian and Bahraini airspace. Air Italy, in which Qatar Airways held a minority stake, went into liquidation in February. - Reuters