Australia's Qantas says regulator lawsuit ignores reality as it files defence

Qantas Airways said a regulator lawsuit accusing it of illegally selling thousands of tickets for cancelled flights ignores business realities, adding that most impacted travellers were put on other flights or reimbursed. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC), which sued the country's flagship carrier in August, has said that in some cases, flights were on sale for several weeks after cancellation. "The ACCC's case ignores a fundamental reality and a key condition that applies when airlines sell a ticket," Qantas said in a statement on Monday. "While all airlines work hard to operate flights at their scheduled times, no airline can guarantee that," it added, noting weather conditions and other unforeseen problems make delays and cancellations "inevitable and unavoidable". In its defence filed to the Federal Court, Qantas said it was responsible for "many unacceptable delays" as it sought to restart international travel in 2022 after COVID restrictions were lifted.<br/>But it added that its actions never amounted to charging a "fee for no service", as the ACCC has accused it of doing, "because customers were reaccommodated on other flights as close as possible to their original time or offered a full refund". The ACCC declined to comment, saying the matter was before the court.<br/>
Reuters
https://www.reuters.com/business/aerospace-defense/qantas-files-defence-against-litigation-over-cancelled-flights-tickets-sale-2023-10-29/
10/30/23