Wong dispatches crisis squads to Middle East to help stranded Australians - but no rescue planes yet
Nick Newling and Daniel Lo Surdo - March 4, 2026
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Six crisis teams will be dispatched to the Middle East to help stranded travellers and expats, as the first commercial flight to Australia is due to arrive in Sydney late Wednesday night.
Warning that the conflict was “spreading and intensifying” as Iranians bombarded 10 other nations in retaliation for US and Israeli attacks on the rogue nation since the weekend, Wong said the teams were sent to help deal with the demand for help in an “unprecedented situation”.
“It is not limited, and it is not contained in the way that we have seen previously, which is why we see so many countries affected and so many travellers disrupted,” she said.
In a terse press conference, Wong pushed back at Coalition criticisms that Australians didnt get the same level of warning delivered to families of the diplomatic corps in Lebanon and Israel when they evacuated a week ago.
“We certainly did not know that Iran was going to hit 10 countries in the region. And you know, for those who are criticising, if they think they knew that, then they probably should have told us,” she said.
“There were some 41 different warnings, updates on travel advice about the possibility of conflict or instability in the Middle East. What I would say to Australians is… please look at their travel advice.”
Emirates flight EK414 took off from Dubai shortly after 9.20am (AEDT) and is set to land in Sydney after 10.30pm on Wednesday, as the Australian Defence Force confirmed they were preparing to help evacuate Australians stranded in the Middle East, amid calls from the opposition for “every option” to be considered.
Speaking to ABC Radio National on Wednesday morning, Foreign Minister Penny Wong said: “This is a consular crisis that dwarfs any that Australia has had to deal with in terms of numbers of people.
“The foreign minister of the Arab Emirates explained to me that around 24,000 Australians are in his country. We discussed when I spoke with him … that the best way to get people out is to get commercial flights started.”
Since the closure of airspace over the Middle East on Saturday evening (AEDT), government ministers have consistently argued that commercial flights are the most practical way for the 115,000 stranded Australians to return home.
The United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy and Spain have all either announced or begun operating charter flights to return stranded citizens. The United States has urged Americans to use available commercial transport to exit the region.
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