Eastern Eye (UK)

Airline stops Kabul flights citing Taliban ‘meddling’

PAKISTAN NATIONAL CARRIER ASKED TO REDUCE FARES OR FACE BAN

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PAKISTAN Internatio­nal Airlines (PIA) suspended flights to Kabul last Thursday (14) after what it called heavy-handed interferen­ce by Taliban authoritie­s.

The suspension took place as the Taliban government ordered the airline, the only internatio­nal carrier operating regularly out of the Afghan capital, to cut ticket prices to the levels of before the fall of the Westernbac­ked Afghan government in August.

“We are suspending our flight operations to Kabul from today because of the heavyhande­dness of the authoritie­s,” a PIA spokesman said.

Earlier, the Taliban warned PIA and Afghan carrier Kam Air that their Afghan operations risked being blocked unless they agreed to cut prices that have spiralled out of the reach of most Afghans. With most airlines no longer flying to Afghanista­n, tickets for flights to Islamabad, have been selling for as much as $2,500 (£1,811) on PIA, according to travel agents in Kabul, compared with $120-$150 before.

The Afghan transport ministry said in a statement prices on the route should “be adjusted to correspond with the conditions of a ticket before the victory of the Islamic Emirate” or the flights would be stopped.

It urged passengers and others to report any violations. Flights between Afghanista­n and Pakistan have been severely limited since Kabul airport was reopened last month following the chaotic evacuation of more than 100,000 Westerners and vulnerable Afghans following the Taliban victory.

Abdullah, a 26 year-old employee of a pharmaceut­icals company, said the PIA flights had been “a tiny window” for Afghans trying to leave the country.

“We are in bad need of these flights. The borders are closed, now if the airport is closed, it is like we are all in a cage,” he said.

PIA, which runs chartered flights to Kabul rather than regular commercial services, said it had maintained the flights on humanitari­an grounds and faced insurance premiums of as much as $400,000 as Kabul was treated as a war zone by insurers.

No comment was immediatel­y available from Kam Air.

PIA said that ever since the new Taliban government was formed, its staff in Kabul had faced last-minute changes in regulation­s and flight permission­s and intimidati­ng behaviour from Taliban commanders.

It said its country representa­tive had been held at gunpoint for hours in one incident and was only freed after the Pakistan embassy in Kabul intervened.

With a mounting economic crisis adding to worries about Afghanista­n’s future under the Taliban, there has been heavy demand for flights out, aggravated by repeated problems at land border crossings into Pakistan.

The main passport office in Kabul has been besieged by people trying to get travel documents since it reopened this month.

The PIA flights have also been used by internatio­nal officials and aid workers who have been travelling

to Kabul.

 ?? ?? SOARING PRICE: Tickets for flights to Islamabad from Kabul have been selling for as much as £1,811 on Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines
SOARING PRICE: Tickets for flights to Islamabad from Kabul have been selling for as much as £1,811 on Pakistan Internatio­nal Airlines

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