The Guardian Australia

Non-stop Darwin to UK flight could help NHS nurses get home

- PA Media

Qantas is to operate the first nonstop flight from Darwin to Heathrow as travellers struggle to return to the UK amid the coronaviru­s crisis.

Its flagship Sydney to London service usually flies via Singapore but, due to travel restrictio­ns on internatio­nal journeys, the airline has been forced to find an alternativ­e route.

The Australian carrier will temporaril­y operate its Sydney to London flight via the capital of Australia’s Northern Territory, where the Airbus A380 aircraft will stop off to refuel.

The flight to the UK’s largest airport from Darwin will take 16 hours and 45 minutes – believed to be the first non-stop flight between the two destinatio­ns. The temporary route will only operate this week, before Qantas suspends all internatio­nal flights until 31 May at the earliest.

It comes after NHS nurses accused the government of “turning their backs” on them after they were left stranded in Australia following numerous flight cancellati­ons.

Laura Mclaughlin, who has lived in Sydney for three years, organised a group of more than 50 NHS staff who want to return to the UK and rejoin the health service in response to the

Covid-19 pandemic.

The 27-year-old, from Preston, worked as an accident and emergency nurse in a hospital in Southport, Merseyside. She said she had been in contact with former colleagues in the UK about returning to work.

Mclaughlin said she had managed to secure a seat on the flight from Darwin to Heathrow, but there were a number of NHS staff, including doctors and physiother­apists, who are still searching for a route back to the UK.

She said one-way flights to the UK were costing upwards of A$13,000 (£6,600), adding: “As nurses, we don’t have that sort of money to be able to book a flight and get home.

“We’re really keen to come and help but we’re all feeling a little bit like everyone has turned their back on us at the moment.

“It’s such a long way to be stuck with no flights with no help from the embassy or the government.”

Mclaughlin said bringing back nurses from retirement was “fantastic”, but said there were young nurses around the world who want to return to help the NHS. Paramedic Ned Starling, who has worked for London ambulance service for five years, said he spent all day on Tuesday at Sydney internatio­nal airport searching for flights.

The 28-year-old, who has been travelling around Australia for three months with his girlfriend, who is a nurse, said he was in a Facebook group with another 500 NHS workers looking to get back from Australia.

“If there’s any way of just promoting this idea that if there is repatriati­on, there’s a whole bunch of useful people that are willing to come back now, as soon as possible, to work,” he told PA.

“I personally feel that these are people that need to be back in the country. My reason for wanting to come back is really because I want to provide some help at home.”

A spokeswoma­n for the Foreign and Commonweal­th Office said: “We recognise British tourists abroad are finding it difficult to return to the UK because of the unpreceden­ted internatio­nal travel and domestic restrictio­ns that are being introduced around the world – often with very little or no notice.

“The FCO is working around the clock to support British travellers in this situation to allow them to come back to the UK.”

 ??  ?? Qantas Airways is only operating the non-stop Darwin-Heathrow flight this week. Photograph: David Gray/Reuters
Qantas Airways is only operating the non-stop Darwin-Heathrow flight this week. Photograph: David Gray/Reuters

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