Armed guards on Qantas flights to Singapore

Armed undercover security guards will man some Qantas Airways flights between Australia and Singapore after Canberra finalised…

Armed undercover security guards will man some Qantas Airways flights between Australia and Singapore after Canberra finalised a cost-sharing arrangement with the national carrier.

While the overall cost of Australia's first such programme for international routes was not disclosed, Justice Minister Chris Ellison said Australia's conservative government would contribute at least A$10 million a year.

"Now that we've got the agreement with Singapore and finalised the details with Qantas, the programme's up and running as of today," Ellison said. He said similar air security deals were being negotiated with the United States and Canada. Discussions with other countries would begin as risk assessments were carried out.

"I'd hope to have an agreement with the United States early in the New Year," he told Sky Television.

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Australia and Singapore agreed on the aviation security deal. Ellison has described the air route to and from Singapore as one of Australia's busiest with more than 12,000 flights a year by Qantas and Singapore Airlines (SIA).

Ellison gave no indication of whether Singapore Airlines had begun using guards on its Australian routes. SIA itself declined comment.

Qantas chief executive Geoff Dixon said he did not expect fares to rise as a result of the air security deal.

He said no details would be released about how many Australian Protective Services officers would work on the route or how often they would fly.

"They are armed , highly trained and where and when they are deployed is strictly between Qantas and the Australian Protective Services," Dixon told reporters.

Australia began putting armed guards on randomly chosen domestic flights two years ago after the September 11 hijacked airliner attacks on the United States.