This is a loss for blockading countries not for us: Qatar Airways chief


(MENAFN- The Peninsula) AFP

Doha: Qatar Airways' boss Akbar Al Baker accused neighbouring Gulf states of "bullying" his country during the region's political crisis and said his company's profits would be hit by the dispute.

Al Baker,Qatar Airways Group Chief Executive, said Qatar could endure the crisis for "as long as it is there".

"All the people have a normal life, all the supplies are available, actually more than what it was before, so what is the problem?

"We need our neighbours to know that this kind of bullying doesn't work because the people of Qatar are very robust and we have no issue to have our normal life.

"This is a loss for them not for us."

He was speaking at a ceremony in Doha to show his company's support for Emir H H Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani.

Qatar Airways unveiled the latest in a growing number of huge billboards that have sprung up around Doha depicting a profile of the emir, with the words "Tamim the glory".

The image has become the symbol of the country's defiance during the crisis and Qataris and non-Qataris have queued up to sign the boards expressing their support for the government.

Al Baker insisted that Qatar could sustain the impact of the blockade imposed on Doha, but conceded that an impact on profits was inevitable for the Gulf carrier.

"It has to (affect profits) because we have additional costs to operate in and out of the country," he said.

"And this is normal when you are blockading somebody. They will have additional costs to operate in and out of the region."

Pressed on how much of an impact there would be, Al Baker declined to give numbers.

Last month the airline announced profits of $540 million for the financial year to March 2017, a 22 percent increase on the previous 12-month period.

But the airline faces a hit after the June 5 decision by Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt to impose blockade on Qatar. Among the sanctions was a decision to close the airspace of the countries to Qatar Airways.

This means the Doha-based carrier can no longer continue its lucrative services to Dubai and Saudi Arabia, and has to divert some flights on longer routes because of airspace restrictions.

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