The rise of the ME3 has been nothing short of meteoric and nowadays this area of the world appears to be involved in (or ruining) everything, not the least football! Anyway back in the 1990s the advent of Emirates and Qatar Airways seemed like nothing special. Just a couple more vanity project national airlines. Nobody seemed especially bothered by them, but of course that would all change in the 2000s as unlimited funding and a useful geographic location changed aviation forever. Qatar Airways is today a very different beast to the airline that began flying in 1994 and here I take a look back at its earliest years.

Of course, the airline that had served the region’s needs for so long was Gulf Air. It was the flag carrier of Bahrain, Abu Dhabi, Oman and Qatar. A multi-national airline, like Air Afrique in Africa, growing regional nationalism would see it’s grip on its constituent nations loosen. The first step was the creation of Emirates, the new flag carrier of Dubai, in 1985. Although not strictly part of Gulf Air Dubai was of course intrinsically linked to Abu Dhabi and its impact on Gulf Air was massive.


The 737 was returned in December 1994 and replaced by a leased Yemenia 727 in February 1995. The 727 proved to the new airline’s liking and when the Yemen example was returned it was replaced by a pair of ex-Emirates examples, which became A7-ABC and ABD.










Qatar was looking to use Gatwick merely as a refueling point for the short-legged 747s, as it didn’t have passenger rights between the UK and US, but in the end the US refused the service so the service ended up terminating at LGW. With its way to the States barred the airline expanded to the East instead.
One of the 747s was used to fly the London route, which went via Cairo due to low load figures, and also twice weekly to Manila, Dhaka and Bangkok. The other served Colombo in Sri Lanka and Malé in the Maldives.


The ‘new’ Qatar Airways needed a new image. Gone was the burgundy cheatline, although the Arabian Oryx antelope logo would remain. The new Qatar Airways kept the burgundy too, for new billboard titles and the Oryx on the tail, but with a grey base. This appeared first on a pair of ex-Garuda A300-600Rs in March 1997.

The writing was on the wall for the 747s, which had never really been suitable for the airline. One was leased to Tunisair in July 1997 while the other went to Saudia in March 1998. The Qatari government increased its stake in the airline to 50% and the writing was on the wall for its participation in Gulf Air, from which it finally departed in 2002.
Al Baker has gone on to transform the airline into a world leader with a huge fleet of Airbus and Boeing widebodies but the modern Qatar Airways is a far cry from the one that began service in January 1994.
References
Qatar Airways. Wikipedia
2011, September. The Oryx of Arabia, Airliner World
Qatar Airways. RZJets.net


