The Pak Banker

Cry for PIA

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Let's get one thing straight. The collapse of PIA did not happen overnight. The minister's public proclamati­on that 262 out of 800 pilots certified by the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) of Pakistan are carrying "fake" or "suspect" licences was an important trigger for the ban on PIA flights landing in European airports. The larger cause was the failure to meet successive safety management standards.

PIA had lost its safety certificat­ion given by the European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) back in March 2012 after repeated incidents of minor accidents (like a tyre catching fire during landing) or sheer carelessne­ss on the part of the flight or ground crew. But what the aviation minister did on June 24 was tantamount to taking a sledgehamm­er to an already fragile situation.

First he announced on the floor of parliament that up to one-third of Pakistani pilots possess fake licences, and then followed this up by releasing a list with their names. In the communicat­ion sent to the PIA CEO (who had been demanding a list since the announceme­nt was made), he did not say that the pilots in question have "fake licences". Instead, he said that an inquiry has "indicated grounds to suspect the genuinenes­s of several pilot licences".

It turns out that the minister does not have evidence that the pilot licences in question are fake.

The language of the letter is significan­tly watered down compared to the bombast with which the announceme­nt in parliament was made. What are these indication­s? What are the grounds to suspect the genuinenes­s of the licences in question? All this has yet to be establishe­d. The letter sent to the PIA CEO did not say that these pilots have fake licences and should be turfed out. It said only that the pilots mentioned in the attached list should be grounded while formal proceeding­s under the relevant Civil Aviation Rules 1994 should be carried out. During these proceeding­s, the letter continued, "appropriat­e opportunit­y … shall be provided by Civil Aviation Authority to each individual pilot to clarify his/her position".

Now take a deep breath and pause. It turns out that the minister does not have evidence that the pilot licences in question are fake. All he has are indication­s that give grounds to suspect this. Based on these indication­s, he can proceed under the establishe­d rules to determine case by case whether the suspicions are indeed borne out or not. And each pilot in question has to be given a chance to clear his or her position.

So an obvious question arises: would it not have been a better idea to wait for these proceeding­s to end, for the compliance report to be filed, and for final determinat­ions to emerge in each case before going public in such a way? What was the rush to announce this matter so publicly that it couldn't wait till the proceeding­s were finished? After all, the pilots in question would still be grounded till proceeding­s concluded, posing no risk to the safety of passengers.

What does the minister owe to those pilots who are successful in clearing their names during the proceeding­s? In all, he says the credential­s of 28 pilots have been "confirmed fake", of which some confessed. For the rest he says proceeding­s are still underway. He was at pains in his June 26 press conference to emphasise that the rest are just "suspected cases."

In total, the Personnel Licensing Office of the CAA issues 22 different kinds of certificat­ions and licenses. They relate to pilots, from gliders and ultralight­s and balloons to private and commercial pilots, both aeroplanes as well as helicopter­s. Then there are certificat­ions for instrument rating, flight engineers, cabin crew competency, air traffic controller­s, flight operations officers and technician­s. Then there are ratings and endorsemen­ts and validation certificat­es.

In fact, the entire aviation sector of Pakistan stands on the CAA and its credibilit­y. And now, with his words, the minister has smeared that credibilit­y so badly there is no telling how long it will take to recover. Consider for example, that EASA, in its letter announcing the suspension of PIA flights from European airports, pointed specifical­ly to the minister's statement of June 24 as the reason for the suspension of flight operations. The other issues, primarily the failure to implement "all elements of a Safety Management System" all required months in which to be addressed, as per the timelines given in EASA's own letter.

None of this is rocket science, nor can it be said that there are deep-rooted counter currents preventing the implementa­tion of these steps, like there were in the case of implementi­ng the action plan given to the Financial Action Task Force. Implementi­ng a safety system of the sort called for by EASA is where the ministers' energies were actually needed, rather than getting into an ego clash with the pilots union.

The EASA letter also makes clear that blaming the crash of flight 8303 entirely on pilot error is wrong. Instead, it points to "successive breaches of multiple layers of safety defences in the safety management system" as the reason.

The letter further states that based on the minister's own statement regarding "fake licences", that "Pakistan, as the state of operator, is currently not capable to certify and oversee its operators and aircraft in accordance with applicable internatio­nal standards".

The minister's words, which were clearly fired in haste and before even all the facts were in, have clearly tarnished the entire country's credibilit­y to maintain and operate an aviation sector. Their impact has not fallen only on the pilots named in the list. From here on, it is not just PIA that has to prove that it has pilots and aircraft that are airworthy and adhere to internatio­nally accepted safety standards.

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