
Foreign Minister Penny Wong confirmed on 11 March that more than 3,000 Australians have now been repatriated from the Middle East on 21 commercial flights arranged since hostilities erupted. With Kuwait and Bahrain airports closed and airspace restrictions causing rolling cancellations, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) has activated its Crisis Centre and opened a registration portal for citizens in seven countries. Two Dubai-Sydney services landed this morning, with further departures scheduled from Doha and bus convoys organised to move stranded passengers from Kuwait City to Riyadh.
Amid the scramble for alternative routings, many travellers will find themselves transiting through unfamiliar airports with differing visa or transit-permit requirements. VisaHQ can help navigate these complexities: the Australian portal (https://www.visahq.com/australia/) lets users instantly check entry rules and secure urgent visas for stop-overs in hubs such as Muscat, Istanbul or Kuala Lumpur, providing a quick back-up when corporate travel desks are overwhelmed.
Consular staff are also liaising with airlines to extend fee-free rebooking windows. DFAT continues to advise “Do Not Travel” to most of the region and warns that assistance in Iran is extremely limited. Travellers still in theatre are urged to leave on the earliest commercial option, before seats disappear under government charter demand. Employers with expatriates on rotation contracts should review evacuation thresholds and confirm that emergency contact details are up to date. Insurance underwriters have re-classified the affected air corridors as ‘known events’, meaning new policies will likely exclude cover for trip disruption. Organisations that depend on fly-in-fly-out specialists to Gulf projects face immediate rostering challenges and may need to rotate personnel through alternative hubs such as Muscat or Istanbul. While business-travel volumes to the Middle East are small relative to pre-pandemic peaks, the episode underscores how quickly geopolitical flare-ups can ripple through global mobility programs – and the importance of integrating consular alerts into travel-risk dashboards.
Amid the scramble for alternative routings, many travellers will find themselves transiting through unfamiliar airports with differing visa or transit-permit requirements. VisaHQ can help navigate these complexities: the Australian portal (https://www.visahq.com/australia/) lets users instantly check entry rules and secure urgent visas for stop-overs in hubs such as Muscat, Istanbul or Kuala Lumpur, providing a quick back-up when corporate travel desks are overwhelmed.
Consular staff are also liaising with airlines to extend fee-free rebooking windows. DFAT continues to advise “Do Not Travel” to most of the region and warns that assistance in Iran is extremely limited. Travellers still in theatre are urged to leave on the earliest commercial option, before seats disappear under government charter demand. Employers with expatriates on rotation contracts should review evacuation thresholds and confirm that emergency contact details are up to date. Insurance underwriters have re-classified the affected air corridors as ‘known events’, meaning new policies will likely exclude cover for trip disruption. Organisations that depend on fly-in-fly-out specialists to Gulf projects face immediate rostering challenges and may need to rotate personnel through alternative hubs such as Muscat or Istanbul. While business-travel volumes to the Middle East are small relative to pre-pandemic peaks, the episode underscores how quickly geopolitical flare-ups can ripple through global mobility programs – and the importance of integrating consular alerts into travel-risk dashboards.