News Update: Channel Seven to air unseen Schapelle Corby footage.
Channel Seven is set to air unseen footage of Schapelle Corby after her release from prison.
The footage will be broadcast at 8pm this Sunday on Seven’s Sunday Night program, and will follow Corby inside her car as she leaves Bali’s Kerobokan Prison, as well as document her reunion with her sister Mercedes as a free woman.
You can watch the preview for the episode below:
1. Qantas cuts
UPDATE: Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce has confirmed the airline will axe an expected 5000 jobs over the next three years.
Speaking at a media press conference today, Joyce said: “We will cut where we can in order to invest where we must.”
Qantas is expected to announce a $350 million loss this morning when the company announces its financial results.
5000 jobs are expected to be cut and the announcement is expected to include the early retirement of older Boeing 767 and 747 planes.
The announcement comes as the Federal Government is considering a short-term debt guarantee, as well as repealing the foreign ownership limits that cap the company’s foreign ownership at 49 per cent.
Reports that workers may strike over the cuts have seen security ramped up in airports around Australia.
The announcement is expected shortly after 9am.
Top Comments
I have a friend who has been a domestic flight attendant with Qantas for over 30 years. Their perks are way out of step for the times we live in. Not only does she and every member of her immediate family fly Business class, but the partners of her teenage and early twenties children do too. I get tired of seeing the photos pop up in my fb feed of them all off to another exotic location stretched out in their Business class seats. Not even the PM flies Business for personal travel. It seems to be a luxury Qantas cannot afford.
Staff travel standby i.e. can only fly on a flight that has vacant seats - no vacant seats = no flight (no matter what class it is). They also have to pay for that seat. Admittedly it is a small amount compared to a full fare paying passenger, but since the seat was already empty, some payment is better than nothing. Hope that clarifies your point.
I feel desperately sorry for the people at Qantas who will soon be out of work. What a stressful time for them and their families.
Also, one would think that given Alan Joyce is drawing a salary of $3.3 million, he'd come out and say he's taking a pay cut to share the pain. I won't hold my breath though.