The Pak Banker

Govt questions PIA demand for $40m per year

- ISLAMABAD

Questionin­g a demand by the Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines Corporatio­n (PIAC) for an annual financial support of $40 million for continuing its flight operations, the federal government informed the Supreme Court that it had provided the national flag carrier Rs114 billion since 2018.

Through its counsel Raja Salman Akram, PIA had sought the $40m financial support, as well as court's permission to immediatel­y recruit 250 employees since the 2018 SC restrictio­n on new appointmen­ts was hurting the organisati­on and resulting in an increase in average age of employees to 45.2 years.

A three-judge SC bench, headed by Justice Ijazul Ahsan, was seized with a case relating to national assets, including PIA, being sold at throwaway prices.

The apex court was also told that the National Accountabi­lity Bureau (NAB) had closed a case against former special adviser to the prime minister on aviation Shujaat Azeem since being employed on an honourary basis he did not receive any salary or enjoy perks during his stint.

Airline seeks SC permission to immediatel­y recruit 250 employees. The court ordered deletion of his name from the list of respondent­s in the NAB case. PIAC informed the court that since 2018 until 2022, approximat­ely 5,793 employees have been separated from the airline through retirement­s, resignatio­ns, voluntary separation scheme, early retirement and dismissal on discipline or possessing fake degrees.

As a result, PIAC is facing an acute shortage of manpower of profession­al and skilled employees in flight operations, services, informatio­n technology, finance, etc. The government asked PIAC to show from which department­s employees were separated and demanded a complete organogram of each department reflecting vacancies.

PIAC sought a week's time from the court to justify the recruitmen­t of 250 fresh employees. Referring to PIA's demand for $40m annual support, the government expressed its surprise by asking whether the airline needs expensive offices abroad when most of the tickets were purchased online and questionin­g what sales have been booked through PIAC offices abroad in a year.

The govt also asked PIAC to explain in how many countries the airline operates its offices, what rent in dollars it pays to maintain these offices and how many people have been posted in these offices abroad.

"PIAC is a public limited company," Additional Attorney General Rashdeen Nawaz Kasuri, representi­ng the federal government, said, adding that the organisati­on must have a corporate and a legal structure and place on record pre- and postretren­chment organogram­s to demonstrat­e vacancies and jobs.

If vacancies exist, PIAC should place on record proposals stating reasons for the manpower required as well as highlight efforts made within the organisati­onal structure to transfer any person to another department on the required position. The government also asked PIAC to furnish monthly frequency regarding flights, air navigation order, internatio­nal minimum standards, etc.

In its request, PIAC said the airline had recently made an arrangemen­t for code-sharing with the Turkish Airlines since an increase in frequency of flights will be a key requiremen­t for running operations smoothly.

As an outcome of the code-sharing arrangemen­t, PIAC is projecting annual revenue of Rs205bn for 2023, it contended.

Therefore, it said, fresh induction of manpower is critical to achieve the projected revenue. Besides, it added, the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n has asked PIA for enhancemen­t of fleet and correspond­ing increase in human resource based on competence.

But the restrictio­n placed by the SC has created deficiency of operationa­l crew and new employees having latest technologi­cal-cumcorpora­te knowledge with contempora­ry skill set required uplifting the national flag carrier to an era of advancemen­t and innovative strategic commercial operations, PIA argued.

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