The Pak Banker

Kabul govt wants to operate commercial flights to Pakistan

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The civil aviation ministry of Afghanista­n has requested Pakistan to allow two of its airlines - Ariana Afghan Airlines and Kam Air - to begin commercial flight operations to the neighbouri­ng country.

In a letter, a copy of which is available with Dawn.com, sent by the Ministry of Aviation and Transport of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanista­n to Pakistan's Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) dated Sep 13, it requested Pakistani authoritie­s to permit air operations of two national carriers of Afghanista­n on the basis of the memorandum of understand­ing signed between the two countries.

The Afghan ministry said its two carriers aimed to commence their scheduled flights and requested the CAA to facilitate the process.

The letter also recalled that the Kabul Airport was damaged by

American troops before their withdrawal, however, "By technical assistance of our Qatar Brother, the Airport became operationa­l once again and a notice to airmen (Notam) in this regard issued on 6 September 2021," said the letter.

Qatar had a day ago warned it would not take responsibi­lity for Kabul airport without "clear" agreements with all involved, including the Taliban, about its operations, according to AFP. "We need to make sure that everything is addressed very clearly otherwise ... we are not able to take any responsibi­lity of the airport (if) all these things are not addressed," Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n AlThani had said at a press briefing.

"Right now the status is still (under) negotiatio­n," he told the presser. Meanwhile, a Qatari official was on Sep 9 quoted by Reuters as saying the Kabul Airport was about 90 per cent ready for operations but its reopening was planned gradually. "Flights into Kabul will fly through Pakistan's airspace for the time being because the majority of Afghanista­n is still not covered by flight radar," he had said.

The Kabul airport was left inoperable after US-led forces finished a chaotic evacuation of over 120,000 people, and the Taliban have since scrambled to get it operationa­l with technical assistance from Qatar and other nations, according to AFP.

Turbulent scenes were witnessed at the Kabul airport on Aug 16 after thousands rushed the facility following the Taliban's capture the Afghan capital. Several Afghans had plunged to their deaths while hanging off the side of a US military cargo plane that was leaving the airport. On Aug 26, two suicide bombers and gunmen had attacked crowds of Afghans flocking to Kabul's airport, transformi­ng a scene of desperatio­n into one of horror in the waning days of airlift for those fleeing the Taliban takeover.

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