• iconNews
  • videos
  • entertainment
  • Home
  • News
    • UK News
    • US News
    • Australia
    • Ireland
    • World News
    • Weird News
    • Viral News
    • Sport
    • Technology
    • Science
    • True Crime
    • Travel
  • Entertainment
    • Celebrity
    • TV & Film
    • Netflix
    • Music
    • Gaming
    • TikTok
  • LAD Originals
    • Say Maaate to a Mate
    • Daily Ladness
    • Lad Files
    • UOKM8?
    • FreeToBe
    • Extinct
    • Citizen Reef
  • Advertise
  • Terms
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • LADbible Group
  • UNILAD
  • SPORTbible
  • GAMINGbible
  • Tyla
  • UNILAD Tech
  • FOODbible
  • License Our Content
  • About Us & Contact
  • Jobs
  • Latest
  • Topics A-Z
  • Authors
Facebook
Instagram
X
Threads
Snapchat
TikTok
YouTube

LAD Entertainment

YouTube

LAD Stories

Submit Your Content
Parents Horrified After Airline Puts Their Baby On Separate Flight To Them

Home> News

Published 12:35 21 Jul 2022 GMT+1

Parents Horrified After Airline Puts Their Baby On Separate Flight To Them

The 13-month-old daughter was scheduled onto a different flight

Anish Vij

Anish Vij

A couple were shocked to learn that an airline had rescheduled their 13-month-old daughter onto a different flight.

Stephanie and Andrew Braham spent 20 hours on hold, trying to get the whole thing sorted out after Qantas opted to put their baby onto a completely separate flight.

The pair claim they were put on hold across 55 different calls to Qantas' offshore support centres, to no avail.

After a day of waiting, the couple say they eventually reached an agreement with the airline to move the family onto the same flight, 12 days after the initial departure.

Advert

The family from Australia say they are now forced to stay another two weeks at their accommodation in Rome.

A couple were shocked to learn that an airline had rescheduled their 13-month-old daughter onto a different flight.
Nine News

The mother said: "They said they hadn't done anything wrong because they did book her a ticket. Initially, they denied any liability.

"We spent 20 hours 47 minutes and 13 seconds on the phone to Qantas over a 24-hour period before and over 55 separate phone calls before they finally agreed to book us on new flights home."

"We're seething. I'm meant to be home," Andrew said.

Advert

"Hopefully, in 13 days, eventually we will. I don't think we will really feel assured until we get on that plane and the plane is in the air at this stage."

In a statement to Daily Mail Australia, Qantas said they 'sincerely apologise' to the family and that a 'backend administrative error' between the airline and partner KLM saw the child automatically moved to another flight.

"We are reaching out to the family to provide support and will provide reimbursement for their accommodation," a spokesperson added. 

LADbible has contacted Qantas for comment.

After a day of waiting on hold, the couple eventually reached an agreement with the airline to move the family onto the same flight, 12 days after the initial departure.
Alamy

Advert

Back in April, Qantas cabin crew spoke out against the conditions they have been subject to on flights.

Staff members of Australia's flagship carrier airline have revealed they were forced to construct 'blanket forts' at the back of the cabin and sleep among passengers on a long-haul flight between Brisbane and Los Angeles.

One employee told 9 News: "I was shocked, a lot of people were putting in reports questioning the safety. I feel like they hate us, I feel that they don't understand what the role of flight attendant is."

Cabin crew were forced to sleep under makeshift blanket forts.
Nine News

Qantas spokesperson Rachel Yangoyan said: "It's really important to note that what you've seen currently is actually not what the long term solution will be.

Advert

"What they will have in installed in around six weeks is a full curtain that wraps around that lie-flat rest area.

"But in the interim, whilst we've been operating without that curtain, we have changed the timing of those flights so that are operating during the day so that our crew don't need as much sleep time as they would typically need if we were to operate these flights during the evening."

Featured Image Credit: Nine/Alamy

Topics: Travel, Australia

Anish Vij
Anish Vij

Anish is a Journalist at LADbible Group and is a GG2 Young Journalist of the Year 2025. He has a Master's degree in Multimedia Journalism and a Bachelor's degree in International Business Management. Apart from that, his life revolves around the ‘Four F’s’ - family, friends, football and food. Email: [email protected]

X

@Anish_Vij

Advert

Advert

Advert

Choose your content:

6 hours ago
7 hours ago
9 hours ago
  • 6 hours ago

    Mystery of family who disappeared more than 60 years ago ‘solved’ as shocking discovery made

    The Martin family were never seen alive again after heading out on a drive to the Columbia River on 7 December 1958

    News
  • 6 hours ago

    Man's disturbing confession to police led them to gruesome discovery of his housemate's concrete tomb

    It would be four years before anyone knew Christophe Borgye had been murdered

    News
  • 7 hours ago

    Expert explains what popular gym supplement really does to your body when you take it

    This supplement is super popular amongst gym goers

    News
  • 9 hours ago

    Donald Trump signs executive order to imprison anyone who burns US flag

    It has been legal to burn US flags since 1989 following a Supreme Court ruling

    News
  • Parents of 'world's oldest baby' explain how they plan to tell their son
  • Couple revealed their ‘genius’ plan to stop passengers from sitting next to them on a flight
  • BA flight attendant wins discrimination case after being sacked for being too anxious to fly
  • Airline pilot reveals one question you should ask while boarding to make your flight 'even better'