CORPORATE TRAVEL
BOARDING PASS All the latest news for the busy EA organising corporate travel
Travel warnings for Middle East
The Australian government has issued a series of updated travel warnings for those travelling to the Middle East. It has urged heightened caution and, in some cases, avoidance of travel as tensions escalate across the region.
Advice has been issued by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade’ s official Smartraveller service, which provides country-by-country guidance based on security, civil unrest and terrorism risks.
At the centre of the warnings is Iran, where Smartraveller continues to advise Australians not to travel. Those already in the country have been encouraged to leave if it is safe to do so.
The government cites an extremely volatile security situation, ongoing nationwide protests, violent crackdowns by security forces, telecommunications disruptions and the risk of arbitrary detention, particularly for dual nationals. Recent airspace closures and flight restrictions have also been flagged, while consular assistance is severely limited following the suspension of Australia’ s embassy operations in Tehran.
Beyond Iran, the Australian government has raised or maintained its advice to‘ exercise a high degree of caution’ for several Middle Eastern destinations commonly used for business travel: n Qatar has been highlighted due to unpredictable regional security conditions and the potential for sudden disruptions to airspace, flights or public activity. n The United Arab Emirates is also subject to this advisory level, reflecting terrorism risks and the potential impact of wider regional instability on major transit hubs. n Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Oman similarly carry high-degree-of-caution warnings. In these cases, the government points to ongoing terrorism threats, the possibility of missile or drone attacks in parts of the region, and the risk that broader Middle East tensions could escalate without warning. n Certain areas of Saudi Arabia, particularly near the Yemen border,
remain subject to stronger‘ do not travel’ advice. n At the highest alert level, Iraq and Yemen remain classified as‘ do not travel’ destinations due to armed conflict, terrorism, kidnapping and extreme security risks.
For businesses and corporate travel managers, the government warns that even countries not subject to full travel bans may experience sudden airspace closures, flight cancellations or security incidents. Organisations are advised to reassess the necessity of travel, review duty of care arrangements, confirm insurance coverage for conflict-related disruption and closely monitor Smartraveller updates before and during travel. S
Introduction of daily Adelaide to Bali flights
Indonesia AirAsia will increase flights between Adelaide and Bali from four services per week to daily flights from March. The expansion adds significant capacity and improves scheduling flexibility.
An everyday service gives conference planners and corporate groups greater confidence, especially when coordinating group arrivals or short-stay incentive programmes. Bali also offers onward connections across Southeast Asia via AirAsia’ s broader network. S
42 Executive PA | Summer Issue 2026