The Citizen (Gauteng)

Qantas attendant accused of racism

ALTERCATIO­N: ARTIST WILL.I.AM LASHES OUT ON TWITTER

-

Star says crew member ‘beyond rude’ and ‘took it to the next level by calling police’.

Sydney

Australia’s Qantas yesterday rejected accusation­s of in-flight racism from US performer will.i.am, with the airline saying it would back legal action against the Black Eyed Peas frontman.

The multiple Grammy-winning artist had lashed out at a Qantas flight attendant and named her on Twitter after she called the police over an altercatio­n during a flight from Brisbane to Sydney.

In his tweets, the star said the crew member had been “overly aggressive” and unnecessar­ily escalated the situation after he didn’t hear an on-board safety briefing because he was wearing headphones.

Using the hashtag #RacistFlig­htAttendan­t, he said she was “beyond rude” and “took it to the next level by calling the police”, five of whom were waiting for him when the 90-minute flight landed on Saturday.

“Thank God the other passengers testified that SHE was out of control,” tweeted William Adams, better known by his stage name will.i.am, adding that the police had “finally” let him go.

He said he had complied “quickly & politely” with instructio­ns from the woman to put his laptop away.

“I don’t want to believe she’s racist. But she has clearly aimed all her frustratio­ns only at the people of colour,” he wrote.

A spokespers­on for the Australian flag carrier said Qantas “completely” rejected the suggestion that race was a factor in the incident.

“There was a misunderst­anding on board, which seems to have been exacerbate­d by will.i.am wearing noise-cancelling headphones and not being able to hear instructio­ns from crew,” he said.

The airline initially said over the weekend that it would be “following up with will.i.am and wish him well for the rest of the tour”.

But yesterday a spokespers­on said the airline would support legal action against the star.

“Absent a retraction, and if the crew member wanted to take the matter further, we’d certainly be willing to provide legal support for them to do this,” he said.

Australia has extremely strict defamation laws and courts routinely rule in favour of those claiming reputation­al damage.

The incident came two months after Australian twin-sister pop duo The Veronicas were removed from a Qantas flight by police after a disagreeme­nt with staff over luggage. –

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa