Gulf News

Aviation authority yet to sort ‘clean’ pilots from ‘fake’

FORMER PM ABBASI URGES SWIFT ACTION TO REMOVE STIGMA FROM CARRIER

- BY ZUBAIR QURESHI Correspond­ent

Criticisin­g the delay in initiating an inquiry into and cancelling the licences of fake pilots rostered with Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines (PIA), former prime minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi has demanded swift action against the culprits so that stigma on the national airline can be removed at the earliest.

Abbasi, who has possessed a pilot’s licence for the last 43 years, wondered why the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) was taking so long in serving show-cause notices to those pilots who had been grounded over allegation­s of using unfair means to pass their written exams to procure pilot’s licences.

On June 24, the Federal Minister for Aviation, Ghulam Sarwar Khan, while presenting the preliminar­y report on the May 22 crash of a PIA plane in Karachi, made a statement in the National Assembly that almost 40 per cent of the pilots in Pakistan had fake licences.

CAA yet to verify charges

Since the preliminar­y findings were made public and the minister made a statement, CAA had not initiated any action against those pilots to verify charges of manipulati­on and unfair practises in exams.

Abbasi, who headed the PIA and another private airline in the past, said: “CAA should immediatel­y constitute a Board of Inquiry and issue show-cause notices to these 262 pilots,” he demanded.

As per law, this needs to be adhered to within a 30-day period.

CAA, as the regulator, had conducted those exams and the Director General CAA has the authority to suspend the licence of a pilot. For cancellati­on of a licence, a recommenda­tion needs to be sent to the federal government.

Credibilit­y at stake

According to Abbasi, Pakistan’s aviation sector was once considered one of the most reliable in the world, but now its credibilit­y is at stake.

He said if immediate action is not taken to rectify the situation, the entire aviation industry could be in serious trouble.

More than 50 Pakistani pilots have approached him, he claimed, adding that they were qualified and were working with various foreign airlines. “They all are worried, as the allegation­s against the pilots have brought a bad name to the country,” said Abbasi.

 ?? Reuters ?? An army soldier stands guard a truck loaded with the wreckage of the crashed Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines’ plane after it was retrieved in Karachi.
Reuters An army soldier stands guard a truck loaded with the wreckage of the crashed Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines’ plane after it was retrieved in Karachi.

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