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DG CAA accused of Rs2 trillion corruption

This make sense?


<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Conspiracy theory: Get rid of <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/PIA?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#PIA</a> pilots, replace them with ex-Shaheen air pilots.<br>Shaheen airways and CAA both are under the influence of PAF<a href="https://twitter.com/najamsethi?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@najamsethi</a> <a href="https://t.co/O66STn4yCK">pic.twitter.com/O66STn4yCK</a></p>— Syedih (@SyedIHusain) <a href="https://twitter.com/SyedIHusain/status/1278736032092106754?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 2, 2020</a></blockquote>
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PUTRAJAYA: The Civil Aviation Authority of Malaysia (CAAM) has barred holders of Pakistani pilot licences from working in Malaysia with immediate effect.

In a statement, CAAM chief executive Capt Chester Voo said the suspension came after an admission by the Aviation Minister of Pakistan, Ghulam Sarwar Khan, that about one in three active Pakistani pilots holds fraudulent licences.

According to the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority (PCAA), 262 out of 860 active Pakistani pilots had not sat for the pilot exams themselves, and as high as 40% of pilots, including inactive ones, held fake licences.

"In light of this, a number of countries have announced their decision to ground Pakistani pilots and ban Pakistan International Airlines from operating flights in and out of their countries.

"CAAM is currently making all efforts to verify with PCAA on the authenticity of these Pakistani licence holders," said Capt Voo on Thursday (July 2).

He added that licence holders who are verified as genuine by PCAA would be reinstated immediately in a joint process between CAAM and PCAA.

https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nat...ilot-licences-barred-from-working-in-malaysia
 
Got to feel for the genuine hard-working pilots. Take note, doctors, engineers, professors etc - none of the STEM fields are secure now!

Sarwar saab however, is. His rocket-science revelations are proving too hot to handle.
 
PIA downgraded to one-star airline after ‘dubious’ degree fiasco

Marred with scandals, the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) has been downgraded to a one-star airline by AirlineRatings after the recent revelation of hundreds of ‘dubious’ pilot licenses.

The EU has now banned the airline from Europe, losing one-star while AirlineRatings.com has stripped the airline of its three-stars for the IATA Operational Safety Audit (IOSA) as well as the one-star for the ICAO country audit.

“Clearly there needs to be an investigation into possible bribery and falsifying related to the pilot licenses,” said AirlineRatings.com Editor-in-Chief Geoffrey Thomas. “This is deeply disturbing as the IOSA audit and ICAO country audit should pick this up,” he said.

The national airline is in the news these days after Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan announced last week the grounding of 262 airline pilots suspected of dodging their exams, a move that caused global concern.

The minister said the pilots included 141 from Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), nine from Air Blue, 10 from Serene Airline, and 17 from Shaheen Airlines.

Global concern has mounted since the announcement, with countries grounding Pakistan pilots and seeking to verify their credentials.

The European Union Aviation Safety Agency has also suspended Pakistan International Airlines’ authorisation to fly to the bloc for six months.

The action on the "dubious" licences was prompted by the preliminary report on an airliner crash in Karachi that killed 97 people last month.

https://www.brecorder.com/news/4000...-one-star-airline-after-dubious-degree-fiasco
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Break down of 236 suspected pilot licences issued in PPP & PML-N tenures:<br>Year Personal<br>2010. 08<br>2011. 20<br>2012. 28<br>2013. 20<br>2014. 12<br>2015. 25<br>2016. 39<br>2017. 46<br>2018. 38<br>ALL SUSPENDED.<br>SAFETY IS 1st PRIORITY.<br>REST ASSURED, ALL INVOLVED WILL BE TAKEN TO TASK</p>— Ali Haider Zaidi (@AliHZaidiPTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/AliHZaidiPTI/status/1278979498629894144?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 3, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
On a lighter note

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/vNqdOkcbTBY" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>

:)))
 
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RAWALPINDI: The Pakistan Interna*tional Airlines (PIA) on Friday terminated the services of 52 employees on various charges, including fake or tampered degrees, breach of rules and unauthorised disclosure of official information to media.

The organisation, however, awarded appreciation letters to 11 employees for showing dedication and commitment to their duty.

The national flag carrier recently grounded more than 140 pilots after revelation in the National Assembly that some pilots held ‘dubious and fake’ licences.

“Discipline is the most important aspect of any organisation as it binds the employees and motivates them to follow the organisation’s rules and regulations. It is, therefore, important to appreciate hardworking and dedicated employees and punish defaulters found guilty after transparent and unbiased inquiries as per law,” the PIA’s HR department said in a letter to all employees.

Charges against dismissed people include fake degrees, breach of rules

According to the letter, the services of as many as 25 employees were terminated on charges of fake/bogus/tampered degrees and documents, 21 employees were dismissed on charges of prolonged unauthorised absence, while service of one employee was terminated for showing disobedience and breach of rules and SOPs.

The letter further said that unauthorised disclosure of official information to social and mainstream media led to dismissal of two employees. Two other employees faced demotion over breach of rules, while one employee faced deduction of increments for being absent from duty.

A PIA spokesman, meanwhile, said the management had awarded appreciation letters to 11 employees for their dedication and commitment to their job and for showing a high degree of professionalism.

The spokesman said the management was ensuring strict discipline in the organisation and at the same time it was recognising and appreciating dedication to the service and professionalism among its employees.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1566898/pia-terminates-services-of-52-employees
 
Cleaning mess of previous govts, says Ghulam Sarwar on pilots issue

RAWALPINDI: Federal Minister for Aviation Ghulam Sarwar on Saturday said that degrees of 30 more pilots out of the 262 pilots suspected of obtaining dubious licenses have turned out to be dubious, ARY NEWS reported.

Addressing a presser in Rawalpindi, Ghulam Sarwar said that out of the overall pilots who were declared dubious, 141 of them belong to the PIA while nine of them work for Air Blue and Serene Air. “They are grounded immediately,” he said.

He said that the flight operations to Europe remained suspended temporarily and the PIA has the right to appeal into the decision.

“We will take strict action against the pilots who are found possessing dubious or fake licenses,” said Ghulam Sarwar while terming the PIA pilots as one of the most professional pilots.

The aviation minister said that they were cleaning the mess of the previous governments as neither pilots were recruited after 2018 nor any test was conducted to issue licenses during the period.

“The aviation ministry saw political recruitments with 11 chief executives of the PIA replaced during the past 10 years,” he said adding that they took over the PIA with Rs 462 billion debt.

The national flag carrier has not purchased any plane since 2006, said Ghulam Sarwar.

“We have to rectify our errors to make PIA one of the best airlines,” he said adding that the case of five Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) officials posted at the licensing section would be referred to the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) and no one would be spared for committing fraudulent activities.

He said that the airlines across the globe had suffered losses of US$350 billion due to COVID-19 pandemic and many international airlines have terminated their staff due to the ongoing situation.

“In the current situation, we have brought down PIA losses from Rs 4 billion to Rs 1 billion,” he said adding that overall losses suffered by the national flag carrier during the pandemic have reached upto Rs6 billion.

The aviation minister said that similarly, the CAA was suffering losses of Rs 2 billion weekly, making it a loss of Rs 20 billion in a moth in terms of flying charges it receives.

https://arynews.tv/en/degrees-pilots-dubious-aviation-minister-ghulam-sarwar/
 
RAWALPINDI: Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan on Saturday announced that show-cause notices were issued to 30 more pilots with ‘dubious licences’ after completion of an inquiry as the government sped up scrutiny process of suspected pilots.

He said the cabinet would dec*ide the fate of pilots though a valid point of case-to-case hearing.

About the suspension of Pakistan International Airlines authorisation by the European Union Air Safety Agency (EASA) to operate to the EU member states for a period of six months from July 1, 2020, the minister told the media the PIA had the right to appeal against the decision.

While addressing a press conference at the Rawalpindi secretariat of the ruling Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf on Saturday, Sarwar Khan said: “We have been verifying credentials of Pakistani pilots serving with other airlines in Malaysia, Emirates and other airlines, though MCAA has not provided the list of Pakistani pilots so far. The solid base verification of pilots will be done and only those who will be certified would be allowed to fly planes.”

He then said that 11 chief executive officers of the national flag carrier had been changed during the past two decades, adding that the CEOs had even been “changed on the recommendations of the union”.

He said the government had sped up scrutiny process of suspected pilots and verification of the credentials of other aviation staff in line with the Supreme Court’s notice. An inquiry board was constituted that started scrutiny of pilots’ licences and a discrepancy was found. Later, forensic inquiry was carried out.

“Inquiry board found 850 pilots with suspected credentials and out of the total suspicious 262 licences were found ‘dubious’,” the minister said, adding that the inquiry report was presented to Prime Minister Imran Khan after which 28 pilots were served with show-cause notices, charge-sheeted and then they were given a chance for personal hearing. After personal hearing, they were suspended as nine of them confessed to having dubious licences.

Mr Khan said criminal proceedings would be initiated against the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) officials involved in issuing dubious licences as their cases were being sent to Federal Investigation Agency (FIA).

He said the CAA had been earning well before coronavirus pandemic, but it was facing a weekly loss of Rs2 billion and a total of Rs20 billion. “And a huge loss is also being faced by PIA,” but the airline had not laid off its employees so far, he said. “Only people with fake degrees are being terminated by the administration,” the aviation minister added.

He claimed that PIA fleet had not been expanded since 2006 rather an aircraft was “stolen”. He said: “We have to restructure PIA and hopefully its fleet will be increased to 45 till the completion of PTI government term.”

For Rawalpindi, the minister said, two mega projects — one Lai Expressway and the other Ring Road — would be completed by the year end for which Prime Minister Imran Khan was expected to lay the foundation soon.

Asked about the dismissal of Judge Arshad Malik, who had convicted the former prime minister Nawaz Sharif in Al-Azizia reference, Mr Khan only said: “He had been appointed by Nawaz Sharif.”

Pilots’ list dubious: PML-N

Talking to the media at the parliament lodges in Islamabad on Saturday, senior vice president of Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz Shahid Khaqan Abbasi said that the government ministers instead of holding press conferences and putting the country’s reputation at stake should take action against those 262 pilots within 30 days under the Civil Aviation Rules 1994.

Mr Abbasi said the PTI government continued to make allegations instead of doing its job. “Allegations had been made first and action has not been taken so far due to which the world now has doubts about the Civil Aviation’s capacity as a regulator,” he said.

The PML-N leader, who is also a pilot, said that more than 50 Pakistani pilots in different countries were in touch with him. They were qualified, well experienced pilots and had been working in different airlines but they all were worried over the government move, he said, as “their integrity was tarnished and Pakistan’s reputation is in jeopardy.

“A list of 141 pilots was given out of which 26 are not in PIA. Two pilots have been martyred in Havelian air crash and their names were also included in this list,” Mr Abbasi said.

He said that six pilots had retired from PIA, while data on 29 pilots was incorrect and 10 pilots had filed cases in the courts and they had no knowledge of their status. The list of dubious licence holders also had 18 such people who did not possess a licence because they had never been issued a licence. It is suspected that the rest of them (43) were on duty on the day they took the test, he added.

He said that the CAA should immediately issue show-cause notices to all the 262 pilots informing them about their charges and constitute a board of inquiry so that they could come forward to clarify their positions.

Mr Abbasi said that according to the rules, action must be taken against these persons within 30 days.

“As a pilot, I can say that anyone who cheated in the written test, his licence should be immediately revoked and such a person should be expelled from the flying field forever,” he said, adding that this authority rested with the CAA.

He said that when the flying licence was given to someone, the safety of hundreds of people became the responsibility of that person.

Mr Abbasi said the licence issue had nothing to do with the recent PIA plane crash in Karachi.

The inquiry against pilots had been conducted over a year and a half ago by the CAA and the Ministry of Aviation, he said, adding that 28 pilots had been sent show-cause notices, some of them went to court but no licence had been revoked till date.

He said the issue of licences had also nothing to do with those who taking jobs in PIA on fake degrees. There may be some people who had obtained jobs with fake degrees, but that was a PIA issue and there were Supreme Court directives on it, he recalled.

Mr Abbasi said even those who were hired on recommendations in PIA had nothing to do with the licence issue.

The licensing authority was the CAA and the whole world had expressed doubts about the capability and capability of Pakistan’s aviation regulator to address the issue in a proper way, he said.

“We made the statement earlier while proceedings under the Civil Aviation Rules have not yet begun. Thus the CAA is being viewed with suspicion,” he regretted.

It was the responsibility of the government and the CAA to urgently rectify the situation and restore Pakistan’s reputation, he said.

The former prime minister further said that the aviation industry was not just 860 pilots, but “it has thousands of engineers, millions and millions of people, billions in taxes … big business. Today all this is in danger”.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1567088/minister-says-show-cause-notices-sent-to-30-more-pilots
 
LAHORE: Former prime minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi lashed out at the incumbent government and said they released a wrong list of ‘fake’ pilots, bringing a bad name to the Civil Aviation Authority and creating problems for competent Pakistani pilots across the world, reported The News.

Speaking to the media on Saturday, Abbasi pointed out that out of 141 pilots mentioned in the list, 26 did not work for PIA, two were martyred in the Havelian crash, six had already retired, data regarding 29 pilots was incorrect, 10 had challenged it in the court, the status of seven was completely unknown, while there were 18 who had not even gotten their licences at all.

The PML-N leader said it was suspected that the remaining 43 pilots were on duty the same day they appeared for their exams.

The former prime minister said the CAA should issue a show-cause notice to these pilots and allow them to explain their position, which was their right. “The rules dictate that action must be taken against those found guilty within 30 days,” he said.

Abbasi demanded action against ‘fake’ pilots under the Civil Aviation Rules 1994, instead of paying only lip service on the issue.

The PML-N leader said the world was doubting the authenticity of Pakistani pilots and the CAA’s abilities after the PTI government levelled accusations even before conducting an investigation into the matter.

He warned that inaction, inability to reform and remediate could jeopardise the country’s aviation industry. “A board of inquiry should be established to allow the accused a chance to explain their status and plead their case. The government reversed the entire process by first punishing the pilots by grounding them, issuing lists and then thought about investigating the matter,” Abbasi said.

The former prime minister said he had been contacted by some 50 Pakistani pilots working for international airlines, who were competent, but were now fearing for their careers as the mishandling of the matter had tainted every Pakistani pilot indiscriminately.

Abbasi stressed that he firmly believed that all those found guilty of cheating and using unfair means to pass the test must be banished from the industry forever, adding that when a pilot was given an aircraft, he was entrusted with the lives of hundreds.

“CAA had the authority to cancel licences of the guilty pilots, but no licence has been revoked thus far. Show-cause notices were issued to 28 pilots, many of whom moved the court,” he said. “These licences had no direct connection with the air crash investigation as the investigations were a means to identify the causes of accidents to prevent future disasters.”

He added, “The matter of pilot licencing purely relates to the CAA and because of the mishandling of the matter, the entire world was now doubting the capability of Pakistan's Civil Aviation.”

Abbasi added that the government must investigate the matter through due process and take strict action against those found at fault.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/296383-sh...ts-govt-for-issuing-wrong-list-of-fake-pilots
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">I asked the PIA's former CEO about how he was pressured during his time at the airline. He shared a couple of examples of how he was pressured to promote an unqualified person and reinstate an unsafe pilot.<br><br>Listen to his comments below. <a href="https://t.co/3cLPTYoLaK">pic.twitter.com/3cLPTYoLaK</a></p>— Uzair Younus عُزیر یُونس (@UzairYounus) <a href="https://twitter.com/UzairYounus/status/1279497033150332929?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 4, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
28 PIA pilots dismissed from service for possessing "dubious" licenses

(Karachi) Information Minister Shibli Faraz has said that 28 pilots of Pakistan International Airlines possessing "dubious" licenses have been dismissed from service.

Addressing a media briefing after the cabinet meeting on Tuesday, he said action has been initiated against officials of PIA and Civil Aviation Authority, responsible for issuing fake licenses.

The minister maintained, "Those pilots whose licenses were found suspicious in the inquiry have all been grounded." He stated that all stakeholders, both domestic and international, have been informed of the action.

He said criminal proceedings are being initiated against such pilots.

Faraz pointed out that all fake and dubious licenses were issued during the tenure of Pakistan Peoples Party and Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz from 2010 to 2018. "It is evident they corrupted the system to do so."

On June 26, Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan transpired the number of pilots who possess "dubious licenses" is around 262 which include 141 of the national flag carrier.

He said that the said pilots have been banned from flying. He said all these pilots were recruited prior to 2018. The government also terminated five officials of aviation ministry for their involvement in the scam.

He stated the government initiated action against the pilots after the court took notice of the matter. At least nine pilots out of 28 have confessed they do not possess valid flying license and failed to clear papers, he pointed out.

He revealed that 121 pilots failed to clear one paper while 39 pilots gave bogus papers and did not appear in any exam.

https://www.brecorder.com/news/4000...-from-service-for-possessing-dubious-licenses
 
LAHORE: The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) has suspended licenses of 34 more pilots of the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) suspected of holding fake degrees.

According to a notification issued by the aviation authority, licenses will remain suspended till the inquiry against the pilots has not been completed.

Separately, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) on Tuesday ordered its member states to bar Pakistani pilots from working.

According to The News, EASA has asked its member countries for details of Pakistani pilots. The letter sent to the member states by EASA stated that the CAA has revealed irregularities in the issuance of 40% of licences.

Moreover, EASA in its letter recommended member states ‘not to schedule such pilots for operations performed under their TCO consideration’.

The letter stated that this is a matter of concern in the aviation industry. It further stated that complaints have been received about fake licences in contravention of international rules and regulations.

Last month, Pakistan said it would ground 262 airline pilots whose credentials may have been falsified after global airlines body International Air Transport Association said that irregularities found in pilot licences at PIA represent a “serious lapse” in safety controls.

Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan, while presenting an initial investigation report into the PIA plane crash in which 97 people had been killed, had said 40% of the country’s pilots held “dubious licenses”.

The European Union Aviation Safety Agency has also suspended PIA’s authorisation to fly to the bloc for six months.

Malaysia and Vietnam have also temporarily suspended pilots who hold Pakistani licenses and have been employed by their domestic airlines. The United Arab Emirates has requested Pakistan to verify the licenses of the personnel working in the oil-producing country’s airports — pilots, maintenance engineers and flight operations officers.

The UAE had also demanded that Pakistan clarify which of the personnel had fake licenses and who were suspects.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/296892-civil-aviation-authority-suspends-licenses-of-34-pia-pilots
 
ISLAMABAD: The National Assembly on the opening day of its first post-budget session on Wednesday witnessed a heated exchange of arguments between the opposition members and Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan over the issue of the ‘dubious licences’ of the Pakistani pilots after the latter was blamed for bringing humiliation to the country at the international level by making such a disclosure.

The minister, on the other hand, alleged that the governments of the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) and the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) had recruited 658 employees, including pilots and engineers, having fake academic degrees and dubious licences between 2008 and 2018.

The house also witnessed rumpus when the opposition members protested over the minister’s remarks that former prime minister Nawaz Sharif was “among the top 10 most corrupt” rulers of the world who was even supplied food through PIA planes.

The legislators also debated the issues of minorities’ rights with respect to ongoing campaign against them on social media and the construction of a Hindu temple in Islamabad and the frequent power outages in Karachi due to alleged high-handedness of the K-Electric.

• Says licence verification was started last year and not after May 22 plane crash

• Mazari assures house of action against those involved in social media campaign against minorities

Minister for Human Rights Dr Shireen Mazari assured the house that her ministry would take action against those involved in the social media campaign against the minorities.

She introduced the Domestic Violence (Prevention and Protection) Bill, 2020, seeking “to establish an effective system of protection, relief and rehabilitation of women, children, elders and any vulnerable person against domestic violence”.

The issue of the pilots’ licences came under discussion when the house took up a calling attention notice of the PML-N members on “the suspension of authorisation for the PIA by the European Union Air Safety Agency (EASA) and UK’s authorities to operate in Europe for six months”.

Presenting the preliminary investigation report of the May 22 plane crash in Karachi on the floor of the assembly on June 24, the aviation minister had disclosed that there were 860 active pilots in the country, and 262 of them had appeared in exams through proxies. He had stated that almost 30 per cent of the pilots had fake or improper licenses and did not have flying experience either.

The minister’s statement alerted the international aviation agency and a number of foreign airlines grounded Pakistani-origin pilots. And on July 1, the EUASA and UK’s authorities stopped PIA from flying to Europe for six months.

Responding to the calling attention notice, the minister downplayed the suspension of the PIA operation, terming it “temporary” and saying it was not for the first time that such a ban had been imposed on the national airline. He recalled that in the past on a number of occasions, the PIA had faced suspensions for not adhering to the safety measures.

He said they were in contact with the concerned authorities in Europe and would be having a video conference on the issue on Friday as well. Asking the opposition not to make hue and cry, he said the other countries would be satisfied when they would ‘clean’ the institutions from corruption. He alleged that jobs were put on sale during the previous governments of PML-N and PPP.

Mr Khan dispelled the impression that they had started verifying degrees and licences of the pilots after the May 22 plane crash, saying the process had been initiated in February last year in the light of the Supreme Court’s order.

He said they had so far detected 658 PIA employees, including 28 pilots and 96 engineers, who possessed fake degrees. One of the engineers, he alleged, was only matric as his FSc and BSc certificates were found to be fake.

Mr Khan said action had already been taken against 54 pilots and “suspension letters” were being issued to another 34 pilots.

Responding to the problems being faced by Pakistani pilots working in other airlines, he said the government was in contact with the authorities and the foreign airlines had sent them the lists of the pilots for verification. He said the UAE had sent a list of 54 pilots and they had already cleared 48 of them. Similarly, he said, nine out of 11 pilots working in Vietnam Airlines had also been cleared. He said the process of verification of the lists provided by Malaysian Air and Turkish Airlines were under scrutiny.

Murtaza Javed Abbasi of the PML-N alleged that the minister had made the statement about the pilots’ licences in haste and thus brought about a bad name for the country.

Minorities’ rights

At the outset, PML-N’s parliamentary leader Khawaja Asif while speaking on a point of order said a “planned campaign against minorities” was being run on social media in retaliation to the Indian atrocities against Muslims in occupied Kashmir.

“If minorities don’t feel safe in Pakistan then it is a matter of shame for us. It is our responsibility to protect their places of worship,” he said while claiming that some objectionable caricatures had been made on social media targeting the minorities.

Maulana Abdul Akbar Chitrali of the Jamaat-i-Islami said it was their responsibility to protect the worship places of minorities which already existed in the country, but there was no room for building a temple in the capital with public money.

Giving a policy statement on the issue, Minister of Religious Affairs Noorul Haq Qadri said there was “no question” about the construction of temple but the real issue was whether or not it could be built using public funds.

He said a few minority MNAs had contacted him and said they had acquired four-kanal of land for the temple and asked him to arrange funds for its construction.

“I told them that I had limited funds for renovating existing places of worship and can’t arrange such a large sum. On the request of the members, the matter was referred to the prime minister and there has been no progress in this regard,” the minister said, adding that the matter had been sent to the Council of Islamic Ideology.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1567845/minister-under-fire-in-na-over-pilots-disclosure
 
ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Airlines Pilots Association (PALPA) has announced it will challenge the government’s list of 262 pilots whom they claim to hold “dubious licenses” in the Supreme Court, reported The News on Thursday.

Federal Minister for Aviation Ghulam Sarwar Khan last month had told the National Assembly that 262 pilots, out of total 860 pilots in the country, had suspicious flying licenses and would be grounded immediately.

In a press conference held on June 27, the aviation minister while giving details of the 262 pilots, had said that degrees of 30 more pilots out of the 262 suspected of obtaining dubious licences have turned out to be fake and they have been terminated.

The minister had added that out of the overall pilots who were alleged to have dubious credentials, 141 of them belong to Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) while nine of them work for Air Blue and Serene Air. All the pilots were grounded immediately, he had said.

According to the minister, the forensic inquiry revealed that 121 of the pilots got their licences by cheating in one exam paper; 39 in two exam papers; 21 in three exam papers; 15 in four exam papers; 11 in five exam papers; 11 in six exam papers, 10 in seven exam papers and 34 pilots in eight exam papers.

The PALPA, however, while rejecting the list of 262 pilots provided by the government has said that the list is not authentic and has decided to challenge it in the Supreme Court.

“We have consulted with the senior lawyers and will challenge the list in the Supreme Court soon”, Captain Chaudhry Salman Riaz, President PALPA confirmed to The News on Wednesday.

He termed the figures of 141 pilots as claimed by the government that they belong to PIA suspicious, adding that out of 141, 39 pilots have already left PIA while four pilots embraced martyrdom in different incidents.

Similarly, he said that the names of 29 other pilots are also not authentic.

The PALPA added that the government did not provide them with the said list of 262 pilots whose licences as claimed by them are suspicious. “We got the list from the Licensing Branch of Civil Aviation Authority,” he said, adding that the said branch keeps the whole record.

Captain Riaz added that instead of taking the list from the said branch, the government took the list from Aviation Division.

Meanwhile, Captain Imran Norajo, Secretary-General PALPA said out of the list of 262 pilots, they have so far received the list of 171 pilots belonging to PIA, Shaheen Air, Air Blue and Serene Air but expressed grave concerns that still they have not yet been provided a list of remaining 91 pilots. “We have requested the concerned authority to provide the list of the remaining 91 pilots but so far we did not get it”, PALPA secretary said.

Meanwhile, he too confirmed that they will file a petition in the Supreme Court either on the day, the apex court resumes the suo moto case taken on the said matter or before it challenging the list of 262 pilots claimed by the government that their flying licences are suspicious.

It is pertinent to mention here that Chief Justice of Pakistan Justice Gulzar Ahmed on June 25 while heading a five-member bench hearing suo moto case regarding COVID-19 had taken notice of the pilots with fake licences.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/297036-palpa-to-challenge-govts-dubious-licenses-pilots-list-in-sc
 
RAWALPINDI: The Aviation Division has cleared 95 per cent licences of Pakistani pilots serving in different airlines in seven countries, while the process of verification of the remaining will be completed next week.

The issue of ‘dubious’ licences drew world attention after Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan revealed in the National Assembly that there were 860 active pilots in the country and 260 pilots had not sat their exams themselves and almost 30 per cent of the pilots had fake or improper licence and did not have flying experience.

Shortly afterwards, the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) grounded 107 pilots suspected of having fake licences and the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) started verification of their licences.

The aviation minister also announced that five senior officials of the CAA had been sacked over the scandal and they could be prosecuted.

PIA chief briefs PM on restructuring of national flag carrier

The ‘dubious’ licences issue also caught the attention of other countries and airlines where Pakistani pilots were employed. The countries which grounded the Pakistani pilots and asked the Aviation Division to verify their credentials included the United Arab Emirates, Malaysia, Vietnam, Turkey and Bahrain. On Friday, the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia also asked the Pakistan government to verify the licences of Pakistani pilots serving there.

The Director General of UAE’s General Civil Aviation Authority (GCAA), Saif Mohammad Al Suwaidi, had asked CAA Director General Hassan Nasir Jamy to verify the credentials of Pakistani aircraft maintenance engineers and flight operation officers who converted their respective licences issued by the CAA.

The UAE GCAA had also asked the Pakistani authorities to clarify the difference between “fake” and “suspect” cases, if any, so that they could take immediate and appropriate action in the interest of safety of flight operations.

The European Union Air Safety Agency has also announced suspension of PIA authorisation for six months.

According to official sources, Vietnam stopped Pakistani pilots from flying and asked the CAA for verification of 11 Pakistani pilots associated with different airlines. Of the 11 Pakistani pilots, the licences and credentials of 10 had been verified and sent back to the authorities concerned, while the verification of the remaining one would be completed by Tuesday next week, the sources said.

On July 2, the Civil Aviation Authority of Malaysia (CAAM) had announced temporary suspension of Pakistani licence holders employed in Malaysia. The CAAM sent a list of 14 Pakistani pilots for verification of their licences. The Pakistan CAA verified the credentials of all the pilots and informed the Malaysian authorities accordingly.

In the UAE, 54 Pakistani pilots have been employed in different airlines, including Fly Dubai. The verification of licences of 48 pilots has been completed and the remaining six will be verified next week. The CAA informed its UAE counterpart about the verification of 48 pilots.

According to the sources, three airlines of Turkey also sought verification of licences of 19 Pakistani pilots. The verification of 18 pilots has been done, while that of one is under process.

Likewise, the Bahrain Aviation Authority asked the Pakistan CAA to verify the credentials of three Pakistani pilots. Of the three verifications, two had been completed and sent back, while the remaining one is under process.

Similarly, the Hong Kong Civil Aviation Authority sought verification of licences of three Pakistani pilots. Two of the three licences of Pakistani pilots have been cleared by the CAA, while the remaining one will be completed next week.

PIA chief meets PM
PIA Chief Executive Officer Air Marshal Arshad Malik met the prime minister and briefed the latter on ongoing negotiations with European Union Aviation Safety Agency to ensure PIA flight operations for Europe. He also briefed the premier on restructuring of the PIA so as to make it a profitable and leading airline.

The prime minister directed the PIA chief to expedite the restructuring plan in consultation with Adviser to the PM on Institutional Reforms Dr Ishrat Hussain and present a framework in a week’s time. “Our government has adopted across-the-board reforms agenda to make institutions efficient and service oriented,” he added.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1568258/95pc-licences-of-pilots-serving-in-seven-countries-cleared
 
ISLAMABAD: The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) on Saturday informed the Supreme Court that the authority had restricted access to its licensing and examination system after the recent disclosure about dubious pilot licences.

Only the authorised systems located at the pilot licensing branch and examination hall, Islamabad, had access to the examination application server, the CAA stated in a report furnished before the apex court in a case relating to the suo motu hearing of government efforts to contain the novel coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic.

At the previous hearing on June 25, the SC had summoned the CAA director gen*eral and sought an exp*l*a*nation regarding the all*eg*ed issuance of dubious/fake lic*e*nces to the pilots who flew passenger aircraft of different airlines, thus putting the lives of people at stake.

In response, CAA DG Hassan Nasir Jamy furnished the report before the court explaining that a security firewall had been configured to only authorise designated system or clients to create connection with the licensing and examination application server, whereas the connections from other systems had been blocked completely.

Aviation regulator says access to exam, licensing system has been restricted; gaps being plugged with additional measures

To prevent misuse of the system after office hours, the application server would remain shut down and no examination could be executed after office hours, it said, adding that network printers had been installed in the examination halls where the marks sheet would be signed by both examinee and examiner after each exam.

And to protect the examination workstation from malicious code, malware and viruses, an antivirus system was installed besides biometric authentication for the examination system was integrated with the existing running system as isolated outer layer at the Karachi centre, but the Islamabad centre was still pending due to limitation of running system of hardware capacity, it added.

Biometric identification

Moreover, the report said, the CCTV camera system had been installed for the monitoring of examination room at Karachi and Islam*abad. It said the total number of pilots in employment in the Pakistan International Airlines Corporation (PIAC) was 450. The CAA had requested the National Database and Registration Authority (Nadra) through the controlling division of the federal government to develop a system for the integration with Automated Biometric Identification Solutions (ABIS) to minimise the chance of reoccurrence of future unauthorised access to the CAA personnel licensing system for technical examination.

Recalling the 2018 direction of the Supreme Court for verification of degrees and certificates of the pilots holding commercial licences and cabin crew, the report mentioned that the CAA had undertaken an exercise and completed it in January 2019.

During this exercise, 16 pilots were identified with fake educational certificates and suspended, but they opted for a right of appeal and on verification of having valid equivalent qualification, the suspension of eight pilots was withdrawn.

During the verification process, the CAA also initiated a process for the scrutiny of pilots licensing record. The CAA identified certain anomalies in the computerised data of pilots’ technical examination. Consequently, for flight safety concerns, the CAA initially suspended 28 pilots and later 54 pilots.

Lately, the Board of Inquiry (BOI) identified 262 suspended pilots, including the 54 earlier suspended, who had access to the CAA computerized technical system.

The report also explained the procedural irregularities highlighted by the BOI such as pilots not having attempted papers on a scheduled date or scheduled time, CAA examination server being accessed from a different IP address or by a different user name and password, or the pilot flight logbook indicating that the pilots concerned were operating flight on the scheduled date of papers.

The report, however, assured the court that the CAA re-verified the credentials of 208 suspected pilots who have already been grounded before the issuance orders under the Rule 342(2) of the Civil Aviation Authority Rules, 1994.

The BOI during the forensic audit had not confronted the 262 suspected pilots with the incriminating evidence against them, the report said, adding that to ensure due process of law, the suspected pilots were provided with the right to appeal.

The CAA explained that it forwarded a summary to the federal cabinet for the cancellation of licence of 28 of the 54 pilots who had earlier been suspended in exercise of the power conferred under CAA Rules, 1994.

Moreover, 34 of the remaining 208 suspected pilots had been issued suspension order with a right to appeal before forwarding the summary to the federal government.

Similarly, Airblue, a private airline, also furnished a report before the Supreme Court highlighting that nine pilots in the airline were possessing suspected licences as per the list provided by the aviation ministry. Of them, seven pilots had already left the airline in 2014, 2015 and 2018.

During the years 2018-19, it said, 100 pilots were working in the Airblue Ltd. Their educational certificates and degrees were sent for verification and as per report of the relevant institutions the educational certificates and degrees of 98 pilots were found correct and genuine, it said, adding that the educational documents of two pilots were found to be bogus.

Later services of both pilots were terminated by the management, the report said, adding that at present 85 pilots were working with the Airblue and none of them possessed suspected educational documents or dubious licence.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1568489/sc-briefed-on-caa-steps-over-pilots-licences
 
The National Accountability Bureau (NAB) has begun examining the financial details of Minister for Aviation Ghulam Sarwar Khan in a probe into allegations that he has possession of assets beyond known sources of income.

NAB officials on Sunday said that Sarwar will be summoned by the anti-corruption watchdog if a huge difference appears in the information received and the asset details submitted by him to the Election Commission of Pakistan.

The anti-graft watchdog has also sought for details of the minister's family members — including his wife and children — from the Rawalpindi Revenue Department pertaining to the ongoing probe into his assets.

Earlier, on May 15, Additional Director (Staff) for Director-General NAB Muhammad Saleem Ahmad Khan wrote a letter to Rawalpindi Administration for provision of details about the properties of the federal minister and his family, The News reported.

According to the letter, the NAB is in the process of complaint verification against Ghulam Sarwar Khan. The Additional Deputy Commissioner (Revenue), Rawalpindi, was asked to provide “record relating to agriculture, residential and commercial properties/ land/ plots, purchased/ owned/ sold” in the name of Ghulam Sarwar Khan and members of his family.

The “confidential” letter had also contained five names of the ministers of the family along with their identity card numbers. The Rawalpindi administration had been told to provide the required information through concerned Patwari to the Investigation Officer, NAB Rawalpindi.

A NAB official, at the time, had said that verification of such a complaint is "a routine matter".

If an offence is determined, then an inquiry begins and a probe against the suspect is launched.

The minister, responding to the allegations then, had said that he is "not afraid of any inquiry".

He claimed that after entering politics his assets had only seen a reduction as he had never misused his position for financial gains.

NAB sets sights on PTI's Haleem Adil Sheikh
A day earlier, the anti-graft watchdog said it has begun a probe on PTI's Haleem Adil Sheikh over allegations he sold government land illegally.

The bureau, in its letter to the deputy commissioner Malir, requested all records pertaining to the sale of 253 acres of government land along with details of Sheikh's farmhouse and other documents.

“In connection with a complaint being processed in this Bureau, it is revealed that 253 acres of government land situation in District Malir Karachi has been illegally occupied/sold by Haleem Adil Sheikh and others in connivance with the officers/officials of Board of Revenue District Malir Karachi," the letter said, adding, ACE, East Zone Karachi also conducted an inquiry into the matter.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/297593-na...uge-difference-in-asset-details-nab-officials
 
https://www.brecorder.com/news/4000...62-pilots-palpa-to-challenge-govts-list-in-sc

'Dubious licences' of 262 pilots: Palpa to challenge govt's list in SC

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan Airlines Pilots Association (PALPA) will challenge the government's list of 262 pilots accused of holding "dubious licences" in the Supreme Court.

Captain Chaudhry Salman Riaz, President PALPA stated that PALPA has consulted with senior lawyers and decided to challenge the list in the Supreme Court soon.

Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) informed the Supreme Court of Pakistan in suo motu case on Saturday that of the 262 suspected grounded pilots, 141 are from PIA, 10 Serene Air and nine from Airblue, 102 other pilots are not employed by the PIA, Serene Air or Airblue.

On Friday, Prime Minister Imran Khan directed the Chief Executive Officer of PIA Air Marshal Arshad Malik to expedite restructuring plan of the national flag carrier and present him with a framework in a week's time.

Sources said that PIA is likely to suffer losses of around Rs 33 billion following a ban imposed by European Union Air Safety Agency (EASA, the UK and the US on its flights over security concerns due to alleged pilots' dubious licenses, sources said.

Pakistani envoys have been tasked to resolve the issue with EASA, US and Britain, while Pakistani British parliamentarians have also been engaged for the purpose. The national carrier along with Pakistani ambassadors will file an appeal against EASA decision this week, sources maintained.

The national flag carrier operates 23 flights weekly with 9 to London, 10 to Manchester and four flights for Birmingham. For EU, PIA runs six flights to Paris, Milan, Barcelona and Copenhagen. PIA flew to 27 international destinations with 5 in Europe excluding UK.

On the hand, the PIA also faced losses due to cancellation of Hajj operation and Umrah by Saudi Arabia due to coronavirus pandemic. Around Rs11 billion to Rs 12 billion is received annually from Hajj flights and Rs 20 billion from Umrah flights.

On June 30, in a major setback to the national flag carrier, EASA barred PIA from flight operations to EU member states for six months over security concerns. Later, the United Kingdom also suspended the flight operations of Pakistan's national carrier to and from their airports.

Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan told Business Recorder that the Finance Division is looking into the matter of financial losses of PIA and decided how to deal with it.

On Thursday, the United States transport authority also revoked the permission granted to the PIA to operate a number of special direct flights to the US, as the fallout from the revelation of Pakistani pilots' alleged dubious licences continues.

On same day PIA announced to resume its regular flight operations to United Arab Emirates. Previously PIA was operating one way relief flights to UAE to repatriate stranded Pakistanis in the emirates, but now, after obtaining permissions, will operate regular flights for the convenience of passengers.

On June 8, 2020, PIA Chief Executive Officer Air Marshal Arshad Malik apprised Prime Minister Imran Khan that the national flag carrier was running into a loss of around Rs 6 billion on a monthly basis due to suspension of regular international flights. A sum of Rs 24 billion was being spent yearly on the payment of salaries to its 14,500 employees alone, the PIA CEO said.

Now the airline is struggling to recover from a fatal crash, years of losses, a collapse in global air travel and the revelation that almost a third of the nation's pilots obtained fake licenses.

To compensate for the losses on international flights operations, PIA reduced its fares by Rs 6,928 for one-way domestic flights. Travelling to Karachi, Lahore and Islamabad will now cost Rs 9,572 as opposed to Rs16, 500. The May 22 crash of PIA flight PK-8303 badly affects the domestic revenue.
 
The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) on Tuesday cleared the licences of 18 Pakistani pilots working for Oman's SalamAir after the Arab country's civil aviation requested for the verification and clearance of the Pakistani pilots working in Oman's airline company.

The names of the pilots cleared by the CAA Pakistan are Captain Fawad Shahab, Sheikh Saifullah, Mohammad Bilal Malik, Mohammad Javed, and Mohammad Rashid.

Moreover, the licences of Captain Muhammad Athar Iqbal, Muhammad Asif, Farhan Khan, Babar Sultan, Farrukh Bhatti, Sajjad Malik were also cleared, whereas, Captain Zia-ul-Haq, Natasha Sultan, Abbas Rizvi, Omar Jafar, and 3 other captains received clearances from the authority.

Separately, the CAA also cleared three Pakistani pilots associated with Hong Kong airlines after it had asked for clearance of their licenses.

On July 18, the CAA had suspended licences of 34 pilots of the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) suspected of holding fake degrees.

The notification issued by the aviation authority had said that the licenses will remain suspended till the inquiry against the pilots has not been completed.

Separately, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) had also ordered its member states to bar Pakistani pilots from working.

According to The News, EASA has asked its member countries for details of Pakistani pilots. The letter sent to the member states by EASA stated that the CAA has revealed irregularities in the issuance of 40% of licences.

Moreover, EASA in its letter recommended member states ‘not to schedule such pilots for operations performed under their TCO consideration’.

The letter stated that this is a matter of concern in the aviation industry. It further stated that complaints have been received about fake licences in contravention of international rules and regulations.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/297948-caa-clears-18-pakistani-pilots-working-for-omans-salam-air
 
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Fake licences: SHC dismisses pilot's petition against CAA as non-maintainable

KARACHI: The Sindh High Court (SHC) on Tuesday dismissed pilot Waqar Ahmed’s plea against the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) as non-maintainable saying the court can not interfere in the inquiry into dubious credentials of pilots.

Ahmed in his petition had stated that he had obtained a licence from the CAA but not associated with the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA).

During the hearing today Justice Khadim Hussain asked the petitioner how could they allow anyone to fly a plane with a fake license and kill people.

“There is a high-level inquiry underway into this [fake licenses] issue. The Sindh High Court cannot interfere with the investigation at all,” Justice Hussain remarked.

He added that only those pilots will be allowed to resume their duty whose credentials are cleared by the authorities after the investigations.

He further said that the entire nation has become a laughing stock thanks to the fake degrees fiasco.

The judge asked the petitioner to take back the petition else his petition would be rejected along with a fine.

Last month, Pakistan said it would ground 262 airline pilots whose credentials may have been falsified after global airlines body International Air Transport Association said that irregularities found in pilot licences at PIA represent a “serious lapse” in safety controls.

Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan, while presenting an initial investigation report into the PIA plane crash in which 97 people had been killed, had said 40% of the country’s pilots held “dubious licenses”.

The European Union Aviation Safety Agency has also suspended PIA’s authorisation to fly to the bloc for six months.

Malaysia and Vietnam have also temporarily suspended pilots who hold Pakistani licenses and have been employed by their domestic airlines. The United Arab Emirates has requested Pakistan to verify the licenses of the personnel working in the oil-producing country’s airports — pilots, maintenance engineers and flight operations officers.

The UAE had also demanded that Pakistan clarify which of the personnel had fake licenses and who were suspects.
https://www.geo.tv/latest/297938-fa...lots-petition-against-caa-as-non-maintainable
 
CAA clears licences of 55 pilots working in Qatar, Oman

RAWALPINDI: The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) on Tuesday cleared licences of 55 of the 57 Pakistani pilots serving in Oman and Qatar as all of them were properly licensed and trained according to the regulations of the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO), sources said.

After the aviation crisis emerged, the civil aviation authorities of different countries including Malaysia, Vietnam, the United Arab Emirates, Oman, Bahrain and Qatar formally contacted Pakistan to verify if the commercial pilot licences (CPL)/ airline transport pilot licences (ATPL) issued by the CAA are genuine and validly issued.

Some countries expressed concern over the pilot licensing issue and asked the Pakistani authorities to inform them what measures had been taken to ensure all civilian pilots are properly licensed and trained according to ICAO regulations.

On Tuesday, the Civil Aviation Authority of Oman sent a list of 18 Pakistani pilots working with Salam Air and other operators to verify their licences issued by the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority, a source said, adding that the licences of 18 Pakistani pilots were then re-verified and declared valid. He said the Civil Aviation Authority of Qatar also sent a list of 39 Pakistani pilots employed there to verify the CPL/ATPL issued by Pakistan’s CAA.

Of the 39 pilot licences, 37 had been verified on Tuesday while the remaining two would take a few days to be re-verified, the source said.

Six Pakistani pilots serving in Kuwait and seven pilots employed in Saudi Arabia had also been cleared though the CAA had not received a formal request from the Arab countries to verify the licences of Pakistani pilots employed there.

Permission to Bangladesh
Separately, the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) has granted permission for operating special chartered flight on the Dhaka-Lahore-Dhaka route transporting inbound passengers and one human remains on July 16 through the US-Bangla Airlines. According to the CAA, the permission was subjected to full compliance with all standard operating procedures (SOPs), including those related to transportation of the bodies of Covid-19 patients, issued by the competent authorities.
https://www.dawn.com/news/1569088/caa-clears-licences-of-55-pilots-working-in-qatar-oman
 
^ The highlighted point:


“It is important to clarify that all CPL / ATPL Pilot licenses issued by the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority are genuine and validly issued. None of the Pilot Licenses are fake, rather the matter has been misconstrued and incorrectly highlighted in the media / social media.”

The report conveniently failed to mention that the matter has been misconstrued and incorrectly highlighted not by the media but by the Aviation Minister himself, who made up stuff for political point scoring.

This is the integrity and competency of PTI.

The most shameless and useless government in Pakistan’s history.
 
Another day, another humiliation for this joker government. They lied through their teeth about the fake licenses and destroyed the already fledging reputation of PIA for political point scoring.

PTI is a party of liars and it all starts from the top. The fake leadership of the fake messiah will run this country into the ground.

When will Ghulam Sarwar resign as minister of aviation and when will Imran Khan issue a national apology?
PTI continues to break records of incompetence. They are well on their way to complete self-destruction.
[MENTION=1269]Bewal Express[/MENTION] [MENTION=138254]Syed1[/MENTION] [MENTION=253]the Great Khan[/MENTION]
 
Another day, another humiliation for this joker government. They lied through their teeth about the fake licenses and destroyed the already fledging reputation of PIA for political point scoring.

PTI is a party of liars and it all starts from the top. The fake leadership of the fake messiah will run this country into the ground.

When will Ghulam Sarwar resign as minister of aviation and when will Imran Khan issue a national apology?
PTI continues to break records of incompetence. They are well on their way to complete self-destruction.
[MENTION=1269]Bewal Express[/MENTION] [MENTION=138254]Syed1[/MENTION] [MENTION=253]the Great Khan[/MENTION]

If you want to debate, then you need to debate all points not when it suits you. You were tagged in by people on Uzair Baluch and you ran like your leaders. So don't tag me again Uncle Tom, you are a supporter of thugs and murderers. If are a man debate everything.
 
Another day, another humiliation for this joker government. They lied through their teeth about the fake licenses and destroyed the already fledging reputation of PIA for political point scoring.

PTI is a party of liars and it all starts from the top. The fake leadership of the fake messiah will run this country into the ground.

When will Ghulam Sarwar resign as minister of aviation and when will Imran Khan issue a national apology?
PTI continues to break records of incompetence. They are well on their way to complete self-destruction.
[MENTION=1269]Bewal Express[/MENTION] [MENTION=138254]Syed1[/MENTION] [MENTION=253]the Great Khan[/MENTION]

dont mention me if your not willing to really have a proper debate. There are a ton of things you have been tagged into that you have avoided. In this case I will await the govts response to the CAA's incompetence and then will be happy to discuss, but before that lets hear what you have to say about the disaster that was the previous two democratically elected governments and their support for terrorists murderers and ****.

p.s. I am still convinced you are not what you claim to be on this forum.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">1/6 Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority has received requests from 10 countries namely UAE, Turkey, Malaysia, Vietnam, Bahrain, Ethiopia, Hong Kong, Oman , Qatar, Kuwait for validation of credentials of 176 Pakistani pilots.</p>— PCAAOfficial (@official_pcaa) <a href="https://twitter.com/official_pcaa/status/1283791315847786497?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 16, 2020</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">2/6 166 of these have been validated as genuine and certified by the CAA Pakistan as having no anomaly. Process for the remaining 10 shall be concluded by next week. Same information has been communicated to respective countries.</p>— PCAAOfficial (@official_pcaa) <a href="https://twitter.com/official_pcaa/status/1283791223803830274?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 16, 2020</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">3/6 Total of 262 pilots were identified as possesing suspicious Licenses by the Board of Inquiry and grounded immediately after identification on the instructions of Government of Pakistan. Cabinet has approved cancellation of the license of 28 pilots, out of these 262 pilots.</p>— PCAAOfficial (@official_pcaa) <a href="https://twitter.com/official_pcaa/status/1283791094422044674?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 16, 2020</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">4/6 All 28 pilots will not be able to undertake any flying duties and their licenses stand cancelled aftr following proper legal procedures under which also involved personal hearings afforded to individual pilots. The matter was twice deliberated by the Cabinet before decision.</p>— PCAAOfficial (@official_pcaa) <a href="https://twitter.com/official_pcaa/status/1283790970765611008?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 16, 2020</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">5/6 The process of verification regarding 76 pilots has been initiated while the processing of remaining cases will be initiated shortly as per formal laid down procedures.</p>— PCAAOfficial (@official_pcaa) <a href="https://twitter.com/official_pcaa/status/1283790380325011456?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 16, 2020</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">6/6 The entire process of scrutiny and validation followed by necessary disciplinary action is being closely monitored and personally supervised by Minister for Aviation Mr Ghulam Sarwar Khan.</p>— PCAAOfficial (@official_pcaa) <a href="https://twitter.com/official_pcaa/status/1283790291691016192?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 16, 2020</a></blockquote>
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RAWALPINDI: As verification of suspected licences of pilots continues, the Aviation Division suspended 15 more pilots on Friday, raising the number of suspended pilots to 93.

The 15 are among the 262 pilots possessing suspicious licences. The licences of 28 others have already been cancelled.

The spokesman for the Aviation Division, Senior Joint Secretary Abdul Sattar Khokhar said a total of 262 pilots were identified as possessing suspicious licences by the Board of Inquiry and grounded immediately after identification on the instructions of the government.

He said the federal cabinet had approved cancellation of the licences of 28 pilots, out of these 262 pilots.

These 28 pilots will not be able to undertake any flying duty and their licences have been cancelled after proper legal procedures under which the pilots were given an opportunity of hearing. The matter was twice deliberated by the cabinet before the decision.

The process of verification of licences of 93 pilots had been initiated while the processing of the remaining 141 cases is expected to be completed within one week.

The spokesman said the entire process of scrutiny and validation followed by necessary disciplinary action was being closely monitored and personally supervised by Minister for Aviation Ghulam Sarwar Khan.

Meanwhile, Serene Air, a private airliner, has stopped paying salary to its pilots and first officers who have been identified as processing ‘suspected’ licences.

The human resource department of the airline informed the pilots and the first officers that they would remain on unpaid status from June 29 till the suspected pilot licence issue was resolved.

Earlier, the Aviation Division had provided a list of 10 pilots of the private airline having suspected licences. Of the 10 pilots three had already left the airline while the remaining had been grounded.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1569646/15-more-pilots-suspended-for-having-dubious-licences
 
Vietnam says all its Pakistani pilots have valid licences

All Pakistani pilots working for Vietnamese airlines have valid and legitimate licences and none have been involved in a flight incident or safety threat, the government said on Saturday.

Vietnam last month grounded all Pakistani pilots working for local airlines amid concern from global regulators that some pilots may have been using dubious licences.

“All licences administered by the Pakistani aviation regulator are legitimate and valid. There are no fake licences, as mentioned by the media,” a government statement said, citing a note from the Pakistani embassy to the Vietnamese government.

Vietnam had licensed 27 Pakistani pilots and 12 of them were still active. The other 15 pilots’ contracts had expired or were inactive due to the coronavirus pandemic, according to Vietnam’s Civil Aviation Authority.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1569753/vietnam-says-all-its-pakistani-pilots-have-valid-licences
 
RAWALPINDI: As the process of scrutiny and verification of pilots’ licences continues, the Aviation Division on Monday suspended 68 more pilots, taking the total number of pilots suspended in recent weeks to 161.

Of the 262 holders of dubious licences, the licences of 28 pilots have already been cancelled while 161 pilots have been suspended so far. The decision about the remaining 73 pilots is expected within the next two days as the aviation division says it is taking all measures/decisions after a “double check”.

The government will present a report on Tuesday (today) before the Supreme Court on measures being taken for the safety of air travellers after federal Minister for Aviation Ghulam Sarwar Khan announced in the National Assembly that the licences of as many as 262 Pakistani pilots were dubious.

However, contrary to the aviation minister’s claim, the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority recently declared that all commercial/airline transport pilots licences (CPL/ATPL) issued “are genuine and validly issued” and none of the pilot licences were fake.

Decision on remaining 73 of total 262 pilots expected soon

A total of 262 pilots, including 107 working with the national flag carrier, were earlier grounded on a government directive.

Spokesman for the Aviation Division said that all the Pakistani pilots flying on international or domestic routes had been cleared and well experienced.

“Our top priority is public safety and we can’t compromise on it in any case,” he said, adding that all measures were being taken to ensure the safety in line with the government’s directives.

He said the entire process of scrutiny and validation of licences was being done after a double-check and disciplinary action was being closely monitored and supervised by federal Minister for Aviation Ghulam Sarwar Khan himself.

Earlier, the flying licences of 28 pilots, including seven working with Pakistan International Airlines, were cancelled. Among the seven PIA pilots was a female cabin crew member. “She was among the 28 pilots whose licences had been cancelled. She was unable to justify her exam when she appeared before the inquiry team,” an aviation official said.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1570248/another-68-pilots-suspended-over-dubious-licences
 
Licenses of 18 Pakistani pilots working in Malaysia declared valid

Good news for Pakistan’s aviation sector, after licenses of 18 pilots working in Malaysia were declared valid.

As per details, after the verification by the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority (PCCA), the Civil Aviation Authority of Malaysia reinstated all grounded Pakistani pilots.

The development comes after the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority took action amid the imposition of sanctions by various countries on the issue of dubious licenses for Pakistani pilots.

However, after PCCA validation Pakistani pilots flying aircraft in Malaysia will be able to continue their work.

The Chief Executive Officer of the Civil Aviation Authority of Malaysia (CAAM) also issued a notification for the reinstating of pilots. Earlier, CAAM had written a letter to CAA officials to verify the licenses of 18 Pakistani pilots.

Just days ago, it was learned that all Pakistani pilots working in Vietnam were given clean chit by the government after they were grounded pending clearance from the PCCA amid the fake licenses saga.

"They have valid and legitimate licenses and none have been involved in a flight incident or safety threat," read a statement, citing a note from the Pakistani Embassy to the Vietnamese government. "All licenses administered by the Pakistani aviation regulator are legitimate and valid. There are no fake licenses, as mentioned by the media," it added.
https://www.brecorder.com/news/4000...ani-pilots-working-in-malaysia-declared-valid
 
RAWALPINDI/LAHORE: Following the Supreme Court’s directives, the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) on Friday served show-cause notices on five of its suspended officials facing an inquiry over their alleged involvement in issuing dubious pilot licences.

The Aviation Division, on the other hand, is also consulting legal experts on referring cases against the CAA’s information technology (IT) experts, allegedly involved in the dubious licences scam, to the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA).

A senior joint director of the authority’s licensing branch and a human resources supervisor were among the officials who were suspended. They were accused of allowing some pilots to appear in exams through proxies.

In another development, the Lahore High Court (LHC) on Friday restrained the CAA director general from taking a final decision on the cancellation of a commercial pilot’s licence.

Seeks legal opinion on handing over cases against IT experts to FIA; LHC restrains authority from taking decision on cancellation of pilot’s licence

The Supreme Court had on Tuesday ordered CAA Director General (DG) Hassan Nasir Jamy, who is also the aviation division secretary, to take departmental action on the issue of dubious licences. “Ones who have affixed their signatures on fake licences should also go to jail,” the apex court had observed.

According to sources, the Aviation Division had suspended five CAA officials and initiated inquiry against IT department officials as well as some outsiders suspected of being involved in the exam scandal.

Out of the 262 pilots alleged to have dubious flying licences, 102 were associated with the Pakistan International Airlines. They have been grounded and departmental action initiated against them.

Of the 262 pilots, 161 were suspended and served show-cause notices, while the licences of 28 pilots have been cancelled. Over 40 pilots have so far submitted their appeals before the Aviation Division.

The Aviation Division is expected to complete its process of verifying the dubious pilot licences in the next week. All departmental and legal actions are being taken against them after “double check”, a senior aviation official said.

Stay order

Justice Mohammad Ameer Bhatti of the Lahore High Court issued the stay order on a writ petition filed by Bilal Chughtai, who had challenged the suspension of his licence for being dubious.

The petitioner’s counsel stated before the court that his client was issued Air Transport Pilot Licence after passing all examinations conducted by the CAA in 2015. He said the authority continued renewing his licence time and again till Aug 31, 2019.

The counsel submitted that the authority’s director general issued the impugned order on July 10 and suspended his client’s licence on the allegation of fraud, misrepresentation and failing to appear in person in the written examination. He contended that there was no evidence available on record to support the allegations attributed to the petitioner by the authority.

The counsel pleaded that the impugned order was appealable but the appellate authority in the case was the same that had issued it. He argued that the civil aviation’s rules that allowed the director general to hear an appeal against his own order violated the fundamental right of due process of law guaranteed in Article 10-A of the Constitution.

He further argued that the aviation’s rules were also contrary to the principle of natural justice as they did not envisage a right of hearing prior to issuing an order of suspension.

The counsel requested the high court to declare the rules empowering the CAA director general to hear an appeal against his own orders unconstitutional, and the federal government be directed to provide adequate remedy against the order of suspension by the respondent authority. He urged the court that till a remedy was made available by the government, the respondent DG should be restrained from holding proceedings against the petitioner.

The judge adjourned the hearing for a date to be fixed later and restrained the respondent from taking a decision in the impugned proceedings.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1570932/caa-issues-notices-to-officials-over-dubious-licences
 
Not responsible for PIA flight suspension fiasco: aviation minister

Minister for Aviation Ghulam Sarwar Khan has rejected the allegation that his statement about fake licenses of the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) pilots triggered a suspension of the airline’s operations in Europe, claiming that the airline was under observation for a long time.

“It was not only my statement or PIA plane crash in Karachi [on May 22], which led to the suspension but the PIA has already been under observation by Easa [European Union Air Safety Agency] for safety hazards since 2007,” Khan told the upper house of parliament on Friday.

The minister was responding to a calling attention notice raised by PML-N Senator Javed Abbassi, PPP Senator Mian Raza Rabbani and NP Senator Mir Kabeer Shahi regarding suspension of the PIA flight operation in the European Union (EU).

Easa on June 30 suspended authorization for Pakistan’s national airline to operate in the EU for six months days after the minister announced grounding of 262 Pakistani pilots over ‘dubious’ licenses.

After Easa, a number of countries started grounding Pakistani pilots and initiated a process for verification of their licenses. On July 10, the United States also imposed a ban on flights of the national flag carrier for six months citing dubious pilots’ licenses.

The minister said consultation is under way to file an appeal against Easa’s decision and the appeal will be filed before August 30. He said the EU had not imposed ban on the PIA flight operation for the first time. “We hope that the PIA flight operations to EU would resume by the end of this year,” he said.

Khan said ten countries had forwarded licenses of 174 Pakistani pilots for verification of which 166 licenses had been returned after verification. “The UAE [United Arab Emirates] alone sent licenses of 74 pilots for verification. Forty eight (48) of them have been returned after due verification so far.”

The minister said the country’s licensing authority is under observation and action would be taken against those involved in fake documentation. He said serving and retired employees involved in this practice would be made accountable and action would be taken against them.

The minister said the government undertook the process of verification of pilots’ licenses in the great interest of the organization. He said in 2019 the Supreme Court had also taken suo moto notice of hiring people in the PIA on basis of fake degrees.

“After through verification, 658 employees of the PIA were sacked due to their fake credentials. The employed filed petitions in high courts and later the SC against their termination but all petitions were dismissed by the apex court,” he said.

The minister said the government undertook a proper inquiry and suspended licenses of 262 pilots on suspicion. During the investigation, 28 licenses were canceled.

“The matter of dubious licenses would be brought to the logical end and criminal cases will be lodged against those who were found guilty,” he reiterated.

Ghulam Sarwar Khan said the government will not privatize the PIA; rather the national flag carrier will be restructured so that it may become a profitable organization. “All out efforts are being made to restore the PIA’s past glory,” he said.
https://tribune.com.pk/story/225650...ia-flight-suspension-fiasco-aviation-minister
 
ISLAMABAD: Reeling under the recent dubious flying licence controversy, a special cabinet committee is meeting on July 29 (Wednesday) to finalise a government plan to set up two separate authorities by segregating the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) into regulatory and operational entities.

Headed by the Adviser to the Prime Minister on Commerce and Investment Razak Dawood, the cabinet committee will discuss threadbare formalisation of the organisational structure of the CAA by creating the Pakistan Civil Aviation Regulatory Authority and the Pakistan Airports Authority.

A highly-placed source told Dawn that the government’s segregation plan included outsourcing of different airports of the country in two phases — corporatisation of the airports in the first phase for attracting private investors and completion of this transaction in the second phase by involving the Privatisation Commission and appointing financial advisers and investment banking firms.

The decision to segregate the CAA was taken by the government in view of the sensitivity of the operations and involvement of strategic assets — the airspace. Therefore, one entity will be entrusted with the job of regulatory functions while the other will develop and manage functions of the airports.

Special cabinet panel meets on 29th to finalise proposal; outsourcing of some airports part of plan

The July 29 cabinet committee huddle will be the fifth such meeting on the issue and after that the CAA board is also likely to meet. During one of the earlier meetings, apprehensions were expressed by the Ministry of Defence as well as the Pakistan Air Force over the separate infrastructure for joint airspace management as they were of the opinion that it was not advisable in the national security interest.

But after going through the proposed law prepared by the CAA in this regard, the defence ministry suggested that only commercial operations of the airports should be outsourced while security and flight operations should remain intact under the monitoring of the state.

They had also suggested incorporation of a provision in the proposed law enabling the defence forces to take over the airports in case of war, besides a security clearance from the premier intelligence agency (ISI) by making it prerequisite for those companies to which the operations at the airports would be outsourced.

The source explained that airport and air navigation services presently being undertaken by the CAA involved management of 44 airports that included oversight services for all aircraft operating within the country’s airspace.

The decision to set up two authorities was reached during one of the meetings of the cabinet committee in view of the fact that only six of the 44 airports are profitable.

Already two draft legislative bills are ready — one aims to replace the existing CAA Ordinance 1960 while strengthening the scope of the regulatory body in accordance with the international commitment and the other proposes amendments to the CAA Ordinance 1982 for ensuring establishment of an airport company under Companies Act 2017 and enabling the companies to own the title and assets of airports ordered by the federal government.

The law, however, allows the government to transfer shares of the company to the private sector. The law will also allow transfer of employees from the CAA to the company on same terms and conditions for a favourable condition.

In March last year, the government had developed the National Aviation Policy 2019 to make the role of the CAA as a regulator completely independent of service providers with financial and administrative autonomy within a period of two years.

The decision also aims to achieve the objective of the organisational change of the regulator with minimal adverse collateral disadvantage.

Subsequently, the federal cabinet approved in principle the proposal for separation of CAA’s regulatory and service provider functions. Later, the cabinet had at a meeting on May 19 constituted the six-member cabinet committee under Razak Dawood, which also had the aviation minister as its member. Dr Ishrat Hussain, the convener of the Institutional Reforms Committee, had also participated in the proceedings of the committee.

During one of the meetings, the Privatisation Commission had suggested that instead of making a single company for different airports, companies should be incorporated for each airport separately.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1571344/civil-aviation-authority-to-be-bifurcated
 
RAWALPINDI: As the verification of dubious pilot licences is under process, the Aviation Division has constituted a five-member committee to investigate the cases of 194 suspended pilots.

There are total 262 pilots whose licences are said to be dubious. Licences of 28 pilots have been cancelled, 194 suspended and the cases of the remaining 40 pilots — three of whom have passed away — are under consideration.

According to sources, the five-member committee will be headed by Mohammad Zahid Bhatti, Director Airworthiness, and assisted by flight inspector pilot, acting additional director licensing, acting additional director and senior assistant director legal.

The committee had started its working on Friday and will submit its findings to the Aviation Division within seven days.

The committee will also ascertain the charges of an alleged fraud in the conduct of a computer-based theoretical examination. It will verify the incriminating evidence provided by the Board of Inquiry (BOI) with the Civil Aviation Authority’s (CAA) record and any other documentary evidence.

Some pilots, who had not been involved in cheating in the exam but flying during their rest periods, will either be facing a fine or suspension. Of the 194 pilots suspended by the BOI, over 52 have so far submitted their appeals before the authorities who are reviewing their appeals.

The sources said that the five-member committee had also sought data of 40 pilots — three of whom had already died — to take a decision after reviewing their cases.

The committee will check personnel files of the suspended pilots.

Out of the 262 pilots, 102 were associated with the Pakistan International Airlines and they had already been grounded and a departmental action has been initiated against them.

Meanwhile, the Aviation Division has taken notice of increasing numbers of birds’ activity around airports and directed all airport managers across the country to take all precautionary measures to prevent planes from bird strikes.

In a letter to all airport managers, the CAA’s additional director general and other officials concerned, Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority’s Director General Hassan Nasir Jamy directed them to ensure safety of operations by implementing such necessary measures to keep birds away from airports.

The CAA DG also directed the airport managers to identify sites around airports which should be given special attention for timely and regular waste disposal with the local municipal authority or cantonment board.

He further directed these officials to keep in contact with environmental and bird control committees. The officials concerned were also asked to maintain a constant vigil on the situation to prevent bird aircraft strike hazard.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1571720/body-formed-to-probe-cases-of-suspended-pilots
 
RAWALPINDI: As the verification of dubious pilot licences is under process, the Aviation Division has constituted a five-member committee to investigate the cases of 194 suspended pilots.

There are total 262 pilots whose licences are said to be dubious. Licences of 28 pilots have been cancelled, 194 suspended and the cases of the remaining 40 pilots — three of whom have passed away — are under consideration.

According to sources, the five-member committee will be headed by Mohammad Zahid Bhatti, Director Airworthiness, and assisted by flight inspector pilot, acting additional director licensing, acting additional director and senior assistant director legal.

The committee had started its working on Friday and will submit its findings to the Aviation Division within seven days.

The committee will also ascertain the charges of an alleged fraud in the conduct of a computer-based theoretical examination. It will verify the incriminating evidence provided by the Board of Inquiry (BOI) with the Civil Aviation Authority’s (CAA) record and any other documentary evidence.

Some pilots, who had not been involved in cheating in the exam but flying during their rest periods, will either be facing a fine or suspension. Of the 194 pilots suspended by the BOI, over 52 have so far submitted their appeals before the authorities who are reviewing their appeals.

The sources said that the five-member committee had also sought data of 40 pilots — three of whom had already died — to take a decision after reviewing their cases.

The committee will check personnel files of the suspended pilots.

Out of the 262 pilots, 102 were associated with the Pakistan International Airlines and they had already been grounded and a departmental action has been initiated against them.

Meanwhile, the Aviation Division has taken notice of increasing numbers of birds’ activity around airports and directed all airport managers across the country to take all precautionary measures to prevent planes from bird strikes.

In a letter to all airport managers, the CAA’s additional director general and other officials concerned, Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority’s Director General Hassan Nasir Jamy directed them to ensure safety of operations by implementing such necessary measures to keep birds away from airports.

The CAA DG also directed the airport managers to identify sites around airports which should be given special attention for timely and regular waste disposal with the local municipal authority or cantonment board.

He further directed these officials to keep in contact with environmental and bird control committees. The officials concerned were also asked to maintain a constant vigil on the situation to prevent bird aircraft strike hazard.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1571720/body-formed-to-probe-cases-of-suspended-pilots
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION]
You have disappeared from this thread, 28 licences have been cancelled and the investigation is still on going. That is a horrendous number, you were tagging every in last week, so what happened to you after this news.
 
ISLAMABAD: The Islamabad High Court (IHC) on Wednesday stopped the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) from proceeding against a pilot whose licence was recently revoked by the authority for being ‘dubious’.

The CAA had revoked the Airline Transport Licence of petitioner Syed Saqlain Akhtar, calling it dubious.

“The federal government is directed to submit written comments within 10 days,” the court order said.

After preliminary arguments, the court also sought explanation from the federal government as to “why the post of the director general of Civil Aviation Authority has not been filled on a permanent basis for the last two years”.

Saqlain Akhtar’s licence was revoked for being ‘dubious’

IHC Chief Justice Athar Minallah noted that the post of the director general was one of the most important positions and giving additional charge of it to the secretary of CAA or any other person did not appear to be in consonance with the principles of good governance.

The counsel for the petitioner contended that the post of the CAA’s director general had not been filled on a permanent basis for the last two years.

The counsel referred to para 3 of the impugned order, dated July 14, 2020, relating to revoking Mr Akhtar’s licence which was supposed to be dealt with by the director general of CAA, but as there was no permanent DG of CAA, the matter had to be disposed of by the secretary of Aviation Division.

The counsel further contended that the petitioner was never confronted with any material relating to the alleged use of unfair means to clear the Airline Transport Pilot Licence (ATPL) theoretical knowledge examination.

The lawyer argued that the posts of secretary of the Aviation Division and CAA’s director general had been held by the same person and, therefore, the impugned order, dated July 14, was not sustainable.

He said the order had been passed in haste and that too in violation of the principles of procedural fairness.

The court issued notices to the secretary of Aviation, CAA and the federal government and adjourned the hearing till Aug 12.

The court ordered the respondents that authorities be “restrained from initiating criminal proceedings against the petitioner till the date fixed”.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1571912/court-restrains-caa-from-taking-action-against-pilot
 
Aviation division seeks FIA help to trace employees involved in pilots’ dubious exam

RAWALPINDI: The Aviation Division has referred the cases against five officials of the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), who had been suspended for their alleged involvement in issuing dubious pilot licences, to the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) to identify the information technology experts involved in the examination scam.

According to sources, the Aviation Division has written to the FIA director general, seeking the latter’s help to identify the CAA’s licencing branch officials and IT experts allegedly involved in helping some pilots appear in exam though proxies.

They said the FIA had also been asked to identify IT experts and other people related to networking, if they had been involved in pilots’ dubious exam so that criminal proceedings could be initiated against them.

An aviation division’s team is likely to have a session with the FIA experts to review the cases of the CAA officials, who had already been suspended and served show-cause notices over their alleged involvement in issuing dubious licences to the pilots.

The move by the aviation division came after the Supreme Court ordered CAA Director General Hassan Nasir Jamy, who is also the aviation division secretary, to take departmental action against the CAA officials on the issue of dubious licences.

Following the Supreme Court’s orders, the CAA has decided to opt for zero tolerance policy against anyone who was found involved in the pilots’ exam scandal. “Even those who had appeared in the exam on pilots’ rest day or hacked the examination system will not be spared,” said a CAA official, adding that those who had been on flying duty and had appeared in the exam on the same day would also be brought to book.

The Supreme Court had also directed the CAA director general to show results by clearing the mess within 15 days. “Spare no one and remove all delinquents even if the CAA chief has to build the organisation afresh,” it said.

On the other hand, a five-member committee was constituted by the aviation division to investigate the cases of pilots who had been suspended in connection with the dubious licences scandal. The committee is to submit its report on Thursday (today).
https://www.dawn.com/news/1571924/a...ace-employees-involved-in-pilots-dubious-exam
 
ISLAMABAD: The Civil Aviation Authority’s board has decided to review the functional separation of the authority after incorporating all the concerns the members had expressed during a meeting held before Eidul Azha.

An informed source told Dawn that the idea for functional separation of the authority was presented before the CAA board after the cabinet committee overseeing the federal government’s plans for organisational separation of the CAA met the same day, July 29, before the board meeting.

The plans envisage creation of a “Pakistan civil aviation regulatory authority” (PCARA) and a “Pakistan airports authority” (PAA).

Under Section 7 of the Civil Aviation Authority Ordinance of 1982, the CAA board has the powers to run the authority’s affairs, but it has no power to take any decision regarding splitting the organisation.

Plan afoot to create a ‘Pakistan civil aviation regulatory authority’ and a ‘Pakistan airports authority’

The board meeting was presided over by Aviation Secretary and CAA chairman Hassan Nasir Jamy. Among others who attended the meeting were Air Marshal Ahmed Shehzad and Planning and Development Division Secretary Mathar Niaz Rana.

The meeting of the cabinet committee was presided over by Adviser to the Prime Minister on Commerce and Investment Razak Dawood. Federal Aviation Minister Chaudhry Sarwar Khan also attended the meeting.

In March last year, the government had developed the National Aviation Policy to make the role of CAA as a regulator completely independent of service providers, along with financial and administrative autonomy within two years.

The decision also requires achieving organisational change of the regulator with minimal adverse collateral disadvantage.

Subsequently, the federal cabinet approved in principle a proposal for segregation of the CAA’s regulatory and service provider functions and in its meeting on May 19 this year, the federal cabinet constituted a six-member cabinet committee under Razak Dawood. The aviation minister was one of its members.

Dr Ishrat Hussain, the convener of the Institutional Reforms Committee, had also participated in the proceedings.

The source said the cabinet committee was expected to submit its recommendations to the federal cabinet.

There is every likelihood that the cabinet committee may not meet again and instead, finalise its recommendations for the cabinet.

Two bills ready

Two draft legislative bills are ready — one aimed at replacing the existing CAA Ordinance of 1960 while strengthening the scope of the regulatory body in accordance with the international commitment.

The second bill proposes amendments to the CAA Ordinance of 1982 for ensuring establishment of an airport company under Companies Act of 2017 and enabling the companies to own the title and assets of airports ordered by the federal government.

The law, however, allows the government to transfer shares of the company to the private sector, besides allowing the transfer of employees from the CAA to the company on the same terms and conditions.

Originally, the source said, the plan to outsource airports was envisaged during the previous government of PML-N, but the scheme was shelved during its last days. When the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf came to power, it decided to go ahead with the plan.

Now the CAA board has asked the Change Management Committee to go through the functional separation within the CAA and bring back the plan for consideration of the board by incorporating all the concerns expressed during the meeting, including security issues.

The segregation plan of the government includes outsourcing different airports in two phases — corporatisation of airports in the first phase for attracting private investors, while the second phase suggests completion of this transaction after co-opting the Privatization Commission by appointing financial advisers and investment banking firms.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1572449/caa-to-address-members-concerns-before-bifurcation
 
PIA sacks 63 employees, including five captains

The Pakistan International Airline (PIA) has sacked 63 employees, including five captains with “dubious” licenses, in the process of reform and accountability.

The national carrier’s Human Resources Division released a list of actions taken against 63 employees.

According to the PIA spokesperson, 28 employees with fake academic credentials have been sacked while 27 employees who have been absent for a long time without notice, two employees involved in embezzlement, and one employee on grounds of incompetence have been sacked.

The PIA has sacked five captains with suspected licenses, demoted four employees for refusing to work and cut the increment minutes of three employees. According to the PIA spokesperson, all the actions have been taken in accordance with the law and regulations.

Last month, Information Minister Shibli Faraz said that 28 pilots of Pakistan International Airlines possessing “dubious” licenses have been dismissed from service. On June 26, Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan transpired the number of pilots who possess “dubious licenses” is around 262 which include 141 of the national flag carrier.

https://www.brecorder.com/news/40009609/pia-sacks-63-employees-including-five-captains
 
RAWALPINDI: The Pak*is*tan Civil Aviation Autho*rity (PCAA) has completed the scrutiny process of the record of 262 pilots, while show-cause notices have been issued to 193 pilots suspected of having ‘dubious’ flying licences.

According to sources, the PCAA inquiry board found 850 pilots with suspected credentials out of which 262 licences were found ‘dubious’. The board had grounded all the 262 pilots, while the federal cabinet had approved cancellation of the licences of 28 pilots out of these 262.

Of the 193 pilots, who were issued show-cause notices, 140 have submitted their replies and they are being called in batches by the inquiry committee to explain their positions.

A senior official said not*ices to the remaining pilots could not be sent because there were ‘technical mistakes’ in the names of some pilots and their registration/reference number which are being resolved.

A five-member committee constituted by the Aviation Division to investigate the pilots’ cases has been scrutinising the credentials of pilots.

Meanwhile, the Aviation Division has referred to the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) the cases against five CAA officials, who had been suspended for their alleged involvement in issuing dubious licences. It has also sought FIA’s help against the CAA’s information technology experts involved in the examination scam.

According to sources, the Aviation Division has asked the FIA to identify the CAA’s licencing branch officials, IT experts and other people related to the network that helped some pilots appear in the exam through proxies.

The Aviation Division’s team is likely to have a session with the FIA’s experts next week to review the cases of CAA officials who have already been suspended.

Following the Supreme Court’s orders, the CAA has decided to adopt zero tolerance policy against anyone found involved in the pilots’ exam scandal.

On July 21, the Supreme Court had directed the CAA to immediately complete an inquiry against pilots of the Pakistan International Airlines who possess dubious licences.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1573560/notices-issued-to-193-pilots-after-scrutiny
 
CAA sacks three officials over “dubious” pilot licenses

(Karachi) The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) sacked three officials as part of its continued action against those involved in issuing fake licenses, media reported on Wednesday.

As per details, the aviation authority has terminated three employees including an officer of CAA’s regulatory licence branch and a joint director. The terminated employees have been found involved in the issuance of “dubious” licences to the pilots.

The action has been taken in accordance with the regulations after the conclusion of the departmental procedures.

Earlier, CAA had issued show-cause notices to five employees including senior officers besides suspending their services during an inquiry over their alleged involvement in malpractices in the issuance of licences to pilots.

Those suspended included the CAA licencing branch’s senior joint director and Human Resources (HR) supervisor. The accused persons were facing charges of allowing pilots to appear in exams through their proxies.

https://www.brecorder.com/news/40017474/caa-sacks-three-officials-over-dubious-pilot-licenses
 
The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) has advised Pakistan to undertake “immediate corrective actions” and suspend the issuance of any new pilot licences in the wake of a scandal over falsified licenses, according to an official and a document seen by Reuters.

The recommendations from ICAO, a specialised agency of the United Nations that works to ensure safety in international air transport, come days after a criminal probe was opened into 50 pilots and five civil aviation officials who allegedly helped them falsify credentials to secure pilot licences.

“Pakistan should improve and strengthen its licencing system to ensure that it takes into account all necessary processes and procedures and prevents inconsistencies and malpractices before new licences are issued and privileges of suspended licences are re-established,” said ICAO, in a previously unreported letter to the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority (PCAA) last week.

A Pakistani aviation ministry official told Reuters that no new licences have been issued since July, in the wake of the scandal.

The Montreal-based agency’s recommendations come ahead of an ICAO audit to assess Pakistan's aviation safety management systems.

The ICAO audit, originally scheduled for November this year, has been moved to June, effectively giving the PCAA more time to work on reforms, the official said.

A PCAA spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.

An ICAO representative declined to comment on specific details, but said in an email that ICAO is “helping Pakistan to recognise concerns, and if they do not take swift action on them we will actively notify other countries about them.”

The pilot scandal has tainted the aviation industry and hurt flag carrier Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), which has been barred from flying into Europe and the United States.

In addition to revoking the licences of 50 pilots, Pakistan has also suspended another 32 pilots for a year.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1581560/u...tan-to-suspend-issuance-of-new-pilot-licences
 
ISLAMABAD: The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) has said the issue of suspected pilots’ licences has reached its conclusion after completion of an inquiry and verification process and action against 82 pilots.

According to the CAA spokesman, its director general in the last few days has issued multiple orders to either cancel or suspend the licences or clear the names of the pilots who had been earlier grounded after a third party independent report had identified anomalies in the computer-based examinations held during 2010 to 2018.

Removing the doubts surrounding the licences of the pilots, the CAA has cleared 180 Pakistani pilots serving in different airlines after minutely verifying/checking their licences.

According to the third party inquiry report finalised in June, more than 250 pilots were identified to have suspected licences due to anomalies found in their computer-based examinations. They were immediately suspended after the news about these licences made its way in national and international media.

May 22 air crash survivor travels on board PIA’s Karachi-Lahore flight

The findings of final investigations carried out by the CAA have been sent to the federal cabinet. The cabinet was informed that the inquiry had been undertaken in the spirit of zero tolerance and transparency, keeping in view the safety of passengers and air travel.

The data revealed that 82 pilots had been found to have committed fraud and misrepresentation while taking technical examinations. The orders to cancel 50 licences, barring those who had obtained stay orders, have been issued while lower category licences of 32 pilots have been suspended for a period ranging from six to nine months.

A source revealed that 180 licences of those pilots had been cleared who had given the examinations as per rules but had either committed violations of flight duty time limitations or had anomalies related to rescheduling of examinations or errors in data provided by airlines operators.

According to the report completed in three months and submitted to the cabinet, warnings have been issued to 42 pilots.

The issue of ‘dubious’ licences drew attention after the statement of Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan in the parliament in June following the May 22 PIA plane crash in Karachi that there were 860 active pilots in the country and 260 of them had not appeared in their exams themselves and almost 30 per cent of the pilots had fake or improper licences.

Some foreign aviation regulators instructed airlines of their countries to immediately ground Pakistani pilots till the CAA verified authenticity of their flying permits. After the news was flashed by the media, the airlines in different countries also sought verification of licences of Pakistani pilots from the CAA.

Shortly afterwards, the CAA initiated the verification process by involving the departments concerned. The available physical evidence of all the pilots was carefully checked and investigated to get to the bottom of affair. The pilots were also asked to appear in person, in case they wanted to explain their side of the story face to face.

The ‘dubious’ licences issue also caught the attention of several other countries and airlines where Pakistani pilots were employed.

The CAA spokesman expected that the early conclusion of the whole affair would restore confidence of the international community in the Pakistani aviation sector.

The International Civil Aviation Organisation has already suggested to the CAA to immediately revamp its “pilot licensing system” before issuing new licences and submit a report to it by Oct 2.

Meanwhile, one of the two survivors of the Karachi plane crash, Zafar Masood, for the first time after the accident travelled by air on Saturday and chose PIA’s flight PK-304 for his journey from Karachi to Lahore.

Mr Masood, who is the president of the Punjab Bank, had requested the airline staff at Karachi airport to allot him the same seat on which he was travelled on May 22 from Lahore to Karachi. Mr Masood was warmly received at Lahore Airport by the Pakistan International Airline’s chief executive officer.

Upon arrival, Mr Masood said that he had complete confidence in national airline.

Published in Dawn, September 27th, 2020
 
ISLAMABAD: Retired Flight Lieutenant Khaqan Murtaza has been appointed the permanent director-general of the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority (PCAA), a notification from the Establishment Division issued on Friday read, in the latest development relating to the long-vacant position.

Flt Lt (r) Khaqan Murtaza's appointment was approved effective immediately, the notification added.

The issue of the vacant position came up recently earlier this year when PIA flight PK 8303 crashed in a densely-populated residential area near Karachi's Jinnah International Airport.

Concerns about Pakistan's aviation sector rose significantly after the tragic crash and the pilots' degrees scandal at a time when the 25,000-strong PCAA — which manages around 20 top airports across the country — was without a director-general for over two years.
 
Pakistan's national flag carrier cleared 110 pilots out of the 141 whose licences to fly were suspended in the backdrop of the fake degrees controversy, according to a media report on Tuesday. Senior advocate Salman Akram Raja informed the Supreme Court about it on Monday while representing the airlines.

The three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice Gulzar Ahmed had taken up an appeal moved by PIA Chief Executive Officer Air Marshal Arshad Malik against a Sindh High Court order. Dawn reported that Raja said that PIA had cleared 110 pilots and cancelled the licences of 15, whereas 14 pilots had been declared unfit to fly. He said that a few cases were pending decisions.

The information came when Justice Umar Ata Bandial asked what steps were taken by the airline to vet the suspended licences and whether the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) was pushing the issue enough to get back the business by verifying the licences.

The issues of licences surfaced in the wake of the tragic crash of a PIA plane in Karachi on May 22, killing about 95 people, when Minister of Aviation Ghulam Sarwar Khan told media that 260 of the country's 860 active pilots had either fake licences or had cheated in their exams.

It aroused widespread concerns about the safety of PIA, and EU banned its flights and the airlines initially grounded 150 pilots to check their record but some of them were cleared after initial
probe.https://www.msn.com/en-ae/news/othe...-suspended-licences/ar-BB1bXv6T?ocid=msedgntp
 
Dubious licenses: Govt says 172 Pakistani pilots cleared so far

The federal government has said that of the 262 Pakistani pilots suspected of having dubious licenses, 172 have been cleared after verification of their credentials.

The Pakistan International Airlines came under heavy scrutiny this year after one of its planes came down among houses in Karachi, killing 98 people.

A furore later erupted after it emerged dozens of Pakistan pilots may have been holding fake or dubious licenses, leading the US and EU to temporarily bar the airline.

There were 262 commercial pilots in the country whose licenses were dubious, according to Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan.

A pilot had filed a petition in the Islamabad High Court after he was terminated from his job. The pilot had made the federal government party to the case.

The court had sought a reply from the respondent, which was submitted by Deputy Attorney General Syed Tayyab Shah on Saturday.

In its reply, the government said that 172 Pakistani pilots had been cleared after verification of their credentials.

The licenses of 50 pilots had been cancelled and their cases forwarded to the FIA for criminal proceedings.

The restriction on the PIA to operate in Europe for six months can be lifted after the on-site or remote audit in January 2021, the government said. The European Union Air Safety Agency had barred the PIA on June 30.

It said the matter was linked with the coronavirus suo moto case in the Supreme Court, requesting the high court not to proceed for now.

The FIA had yet to complete its inquiry hence any pilot suspected of holding dubious credentials should not be given relief, it requested.

The court is expected to set a date for hearing of the case next week.

https://www.samaa.tv/news/pakistan/...ovt-says-172-pakistani-pilots-cleared-so-far/
 
ISLAMABAD: The federal government has informed the Islamabad High Court (IHC) that to meet the requirements of the International Civil Aviation Organisation, the authorities have reviewed licences of all 860 commercial pilots and, after a through scrutiny, cancelled only 50 of them.

The pilots were working for the national flag carrier as well as other Pakistani private and foreign airlines, said a report filed by Additional Attorney General Tariq Mehmood Khokhar in response to a petition filed by pilot Syed Saqlain Haider, whose credentials have been found to be fake.

According to the report, the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) has been given the task to proceed against the pilots who managed to get licences through unfair means.

Giving the background, the report said that the additional director general of the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) on Jan 25, 2019 requested the aviation secretary for constitution of a board of inquiry to investigate the malpractice, omission/commission observed during the process/conduct of examination for licences of pilots. Subsequently, a board of inquiry was constituted and its report concluded that as per the computer data forensic evidence, licences of 262 pilots were based on “fake” examinations.


IHC urged to hold proceedings on a pilot’s petition

On June 26, 2020 the CAA grounded the 262 pilots and suspended their licences for verification. The names of 262 pilots were made public to avoid any negative impression about other pilots, including those working outside Pakistan.

On June 30, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency suspended PIA flights to and over Europe for six months. Such suspensions are lifted only after a satisfactory on site or remote audit.

The report said that the process of verification of 259 licences had been completed.

After due process, on July 6, a summary for cancellation of licences of 28 pilots was submitted to the federal cabinet, which approved it the next day.

The petitioner’s name has been included in the list of the 28 pilots at serial no. 16.

Vide a complaint dated July 24, the Authority requested the FIA to conduct an inquiry against the suspected CAA officials/persons and pilots involved in the issuance of dubious licences, including the petitioner. The FIA inquiry is still in progress.

On Sept 11, another summary for cancellation of licences of 22 other pilots was submitted to the cabinet, which approved it on 15.

According to the report, the International Civil Aviation Organisation, the United Nations agency which oversees safety of international aviation industry, in a letter dated Sept 18 recommended review of all existing licences.

As a result, licences of 860 active pilots were reviewed of which 262 were deemed suspect and suspended. However, after verification, 172 licences were cleared and 50, including the petitioner’s licence, failed verification and were cancelled with the approval of the cabinet.

The report said that licences of two other pilots were cancelled prior to the inquiry into the matter. Licences of 32 others pilots also failed verification and currently remain suspended. Three pilots had died before the inquiry was conducted. Verification of licences of the remaining three pilots is still under process.

Referring to a case pending before the apex court, the report said that in suo motu case No. 1 of 2020 (Covid-19 case) the Supreme Court vide its orders dated June 25, July 21, and Dec 14 was broadly adjudicating upon the same issues which had been raised before the IHC in the instant petition.

The report requested the IHC to put on hold the proceedings of the petition till the final adjudication of the suo motu case by the apex court.

It argued that since the FIA inquiry was in progress in the matter, the implication was that there was prima facie a criminal case against the petitioner and therefore it was premature for him to invoke Article 199 of the Constitution to seek relief.

The report feared that any adverse order at this stage would have far reaching consequences for Pakistan’s aviation sector and airlines as well as the pilots who had been issued licences by the CAA. A large number of pilots of Pakistan origin were presently working for foreign airlines, it added.

Published in Dawn, December 20th, 2020
 
KARACHI:
Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) has passed the IATA Operational Safety Audit (IOSA) for the resumption of flights to the European Union, the UK and the US.

However, the national flag carrier is waiting for the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority (PCAA) to get its audit done by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO).

In late June 2020, PIA came under pressure when Minister for Aviation Ghulam Sarwar Khan declared during a session of parliament that 30% of pilots were working on fake licences out of 860 active pilots in the country.

The minister unveiled a report in this regard one month after a plane crash on May 22 in Karachi, which claimed lives of 98 people.

After a series of incidents, Pakistani airlines, especially PIA, came under scrutiny of international organisations, which demanded safety audits. Until then, PIA flights were banned to the European Union and the UK while the US slashed its category.

Earlier, PIA was struggling to start direct flights to the US, but Transport Safety Administration officials visited the Islamabad airport several times and were willing to allow PIA to fly directly to the US, said PIA spokesperson Abdullah Hafeez Khan while speaking to The Express Tribune.

However, after those incidents, the US also banned flights coming through third country, mostly the UK, which was authorised by the US to check all safety standards before the aircraft left for the US.

PIA was instructed, after those restrictions, to get safety registration audits done from the International Air Transport Association (IATA) in order to regain international confidence and subsequently resume flights on western routes.

Finally, PIA’s IOSA registration has been successfully renewed and is now valid up to June 23, 2023, according to a statement issued by PIA.

The national carrier has been maintaining IOSA registration since 2005. Every two years IATA conducts an external audit for the renewal of this important safety registration as an IOSA operator with IATA.

Last year, the airline had undergone two verification audits - first one was of limited scope and the second one was a verification audit, a full-scope audit covering flight operations, flight services (cabin operations), quality assurance, safety management, security services, engineering and maintenance, ground handling, flight dispatch and cargo operations, said Khan.

Audit findings have been successfully addressed and closed by the audit organisation.

The second verification audit was also considered as a full-scope IOSA renewal audit.

This registration is valid for up to two years and is subject to renewal audits by following the IOSA programme manual.

The fake licences and safety fiasco for PIA will not end until the national regulator, PCAA, gets particular audits done by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO), which will determine whether the PCAA safety standards certification and checks and balances are at par or not.
 
KARACHI:
Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) has passed the IATA Operational Safety Audit (IOSA) for the resumption of flights to the European Union, the UK and the US.

However, the national flag carrier is waiting for the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority (PCAA) to get its audit done by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO).

In late June 2020, PIA came under pressure when Minister for Aviation Ghulam Sarwar Khan declared during a session of parliament that 30% of pilots were working on fake licences out of 860 active pilots in the country.

The minister unveiled a report in this regard one month after a plane crash on May 22 in Karachi, which claimed lives of 98 people.

After a series of incidents, Pakistani airlines, especially PIA, came under scrutiny of international organisations, which demanded safety audits. Until then, PIA flights were banned to the European Union and the UK while the US slashed its category.

Earlier, PIA was struggling to start direct flights to the US, but Transport Safety Administration officials visited the Islamabad airport several times and were willing to allow PIA to fly directly to the US, said PIA spokesperson Abdullah Hafeez Khan while speaking to The Express Tribune.

However, after those incidents, the US also banned flights coming through third country, mostly the UK, which was authorised by the US to check all safety standards before the aircraft left for the US.

PIA was instructed, after those restrictions, to get safety registration audits done from the International Air Transport Association (IATA) in order to regain international confidence and subsequently resume flights on western routes.

Finally, PIA’s IOSA registration has been successfully renewed and is now valid up to June 23, 2023, according to a statement issued by PIA.

The national carrier has been maintaining IOSA registration since 2005. Every two years IATA conducts an external audit for the renewal of this important safety registration as an IOSA operator with IATA.

Last year, the airline had undergone two verification audits - first one was of limited scope and the second one was a verification audit, a full-scope audit covering flight operations, flight services (cabin operations), quality assurance, safety management, security services, engineering and maintenance, ground handling, flight dispatch and cargo operations, said Khan.

Audit findings have been successfully addressed and closed by the audit organisation.

The second verification audit was also considered as a full-scope IOSA renewal audit.

This registration is valid for up to two years and is subject to renewal audits by following the IOSA programme manual.

The fake licences and safety fiasco for PIA will not end until the national regulator, PCAA, gets particular audits done by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO), which will determine whether the PCAA safety standards certification and checks and balances are at par or not.

This is good news. Let's make this a professional organisation which isn't sucking the life out of poor tax payers.
 
ISLAMABAD: The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) has submitted before the Supreme Court its investigation report on the fake pilots licences issue, laying bare a web of mismanagement, irregularities and corruption in the process of pilot exam. The report has made startling revelations after its scrutiny of the licences.

The report said that the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) provided incorrect information to 30 pilots. It added that several pilots send someone else to sit in the exams in their places. It said that two pilots were not present in the country on the day of their tests, while 28 pilots took the pilots test on a closed weekly holiday. It added Yahya Mansoor was on flight on the day he took the test, while Shaukat Mahmood took the test on the day of Eidul Adha.

The CAA report states that the licences of two senior joint directors, involved in corruption by giving the pilots illegal access to the examination system, have been revoked. The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) has also registered criminal cases against them. The CAA also informed the apex court that that it has suspended the licences of 32 of the 54 pilots involved in the fraudulent practices.

The issue surfaced last year after May 22 PIA plane crash in Karachi due to “human error”, in which 97 passengers and crew perished. though, none of the pilots on the illfated plane was involved in the fake licences scam, investigations in June revealed that 262 pilots had fake licences.

Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar had told the National Assembly on June 22, 2020 that there were 860 pilots in Pakistan of which 262 were those who had not sat their exams as someone else did that for them. “People with fake degrees were appointed on political basis, ignoring merit,” he added.


Express Tribune
 
The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) has arrested two senior officials of the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) for their alleged involvement in the fake pilot licence scandal.

After obtaining evidence, the FIA registered a case and arrested two senior CAA officials -- Senior Joint Director Faisal Manzoor Ansari and Senior Superintendent Licensing Branch Abdul Raees -- and a pilot, Malik Abid Hussain.

The FIA said the two officials received large sums of money in exchange for issuing fake pilot licences.

The money received was later transferred to various bank accounts by the CAA officials.

The Supreme Court had ordered the CAA to investigate the fake pilot licence scandal.

On the recommendations of the board of inquiry, the FIA was directed to file a case against the employees of the CAA involved in the fake pilot licence scandal. The FIA Corporate Crime Circle Karachi started investigating the case.

A total of 31 accused including CAA employees and those who obtained fake pilot licences have been named in the case.

Raids are under way to arrest other suspects.

In June last year, Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan had made a startling revelation that 262 pilots, out of total 860 in the country, had "suspicious flying licences" and would be grounded immediately.

Later, the PIA announced that it would ground a third of its 434 pilots.

Later, the PIA sacked 17 pilots for having 'dubious' flying licences on the order of the federal cabinet.

They included 12 captains and five first officers.

In the wake of the fake licence scandal, the European Union Air Safety Agency (EASA) has suspended PIA’s authorisation to operate in EU member states for six months expressing concerns over the minister’s statement.

Following the EASA’s move, the UK Civil Aviation Authority said it was withdrawing PIA’s permit to operate from three of its airports. “PIA flights from Birmingham, London Heathrow and Manchester airports are suspended with immediate effect,” a spokesperson for the authority told Reuters. The three were major flying destinations for the airline.

Later, the United States also imposed a ban on flights of the national flag carrier for six months citing dubious licences.

On June 25 the same year, Chief Justice Gulzar Ahmed took notice of the matter and the apex court issued directions for the registration of criminal cases against the officials involved in the issuance of fake licences to pilots.

The court also ordered the relevant authorities to immediately conclude the proceedings against pilots with fake licences. It also expressed its dissatisfaction over the reports submitted to the court by the CAA and the PIA.

During the hearing, Chief Justice of Pakistan Gulzar Ahmed remarked that CAA computers were not secure.

The CAA director general informed the court that the government was introducing reforms in the authority. The chief justice CJP remarked that the incumbent administration of the CAA was incapable of running the authority.

Express Tribune
 
The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) has arrested two senior officials of the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) for their alleged involvement in the fake pilot licence scandal.

After obtaining evidence, the FIA registered a case and arrested two senior CAA officials -- Senior Joint Director Faisal Manzoor Ansari and Senior Superintendent Licensing Branch Abdul Raees -- and a pilot, Malik Abid Hussain.

The FIA said the two officials received large sums of money in exchange for issuing fake pilot licences.

The money received was later transferred to various bank accounts by the CAA officials.

The Supreme Court had ordered the CAA to investigate the fake pilot licence scandal.

On the recommendations of the board of inquiry, the FIA was directed to file a case against the employees of the CAA involved in the fake pilot licence scandal. The FIA Corporate Crime Circle Karachi started investigating the case.

A total of 31 accused including CAA employees and those who obtained fake pilot licences have been named in the case.

Raids are under way to arrest other suspects.

In June last year, Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan had made a startling revelation that 262 pilots, out of total 860 in the country, had "suspicious flying licences" and would be grounded immediately.

Later, the PIA announced that it would ground a third of its 434 pilots.

Later, the PIA sacked 17 pilots for having 'dubious' flying licences on the order of the federal cabinet.

They included 12 captains and five first officers.

In the wake of the fake licence scandal, the European Union Air Safety Agency (EASA) has suspended PIA’s authorisation to operate in EU member states for six months expressing concerns over the minister’s statement.

Following the EASA’s move, the UK Civil Aviation Authority said it was withdrawing PIA’s permit to operate from three of its airports. “PIA flights from Birmingham, London Heathrow and Manchester airports are suspended with immediate effect,” a spokesperson for the authority told Reuters. The three were major flying destinations for the airline.

Later, the United States also imposed a ban on flights of the national flag carrier for six months citing dubious licences.

On June 25 the same year, Chief Justice Gulzar Ahmed took notice of the matter and the apex court issued directions for the registration of criminal cases against the officials involved in the issuance of fake licences to pilots.

The court also ordered the relevant authorities to immediately conclude the proceedings against pilots with fake licences. It also expressed its dissatisfaction over the reports submitted to the court by the CAA and the PIA.

During the hearing, Chief Justice of Pakistan Gulzar Ahmed remarked that CAA computers were not secure.

The CAA director general informed the court that the government was introducing reforms in the authority. The chief justice CJP remarked that the incumbent administration of the CAA was incapable of running the authority.

Express Tribune
As always the powerful with get away with murder and the weak will be punished.
 
ISLAMABAD: The Senate Standing Committee on Aviation on Thursday sought details of the pilots working with the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) and was briefed on the functions of the Aviation Division and its attached departments.

The committee meeting, chaired by Hidayatullah, reviewed working procedures, budget, number of employees, challenges faced by the Aviation Division and its subsidiaries and the performance of the institutions.

Among others, the meeting was attended by senators Syed Muhammad Sabir Shah, Faisal Saleem Rehman, Mian Raza Rabbani, Aun Abbas, Faisal Javed, Saleem Mandviwalla, Afnanullah Khan, Dilawar Khan and Sherry Rehman, besides Aviation Minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan, Aviation Secretary Ali, Adviser to CEO PIA Amir Hayat, Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) Director General Flight Lieutenant (retd) Khaqan Murtaza, Airport Security Force chief security officer, Pakistan Meteorological Department director general and other senior officials.

It also looked into the measures taken by the Aviation Division to improve performance of the attached departments and its future plans to tackle challenges confronted on the professional front.

It was the committee's first meeting after its reconstitution followed by the Senate elections.
Hidayatullah said the committee proceedings would be made more effective with mutual consultation of the members so that the confronted issues could be removed in an efficient manner. Senator Sherry Rehman said that the previous body had worked very hard and made some decisions which would have benefited, if implemented, in improving institutional affairs.

Aviation Secretary Shoukat Ali gave a detailed briefing to the committee on the Aviation Division's mission, subsidiaries, functions, organisational structure, number of employees, aviation budget and performance. APP
 
Serious financial anomalies to the tune of Rs300 billion have been found in the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), according to the auditor general (AG) audit report for the financial year 2019-20.

As per the audit report released on Tuesday, the authority incurred a massive loss on account of financial irregularities, illegal flight permits and illegal occupation of its land.

It laments that despite several reminders, the CAA failed to convene a meeting of the Departmental Audit Committee (DAC).

The report, based on the 53 audit paras, also includes paras of financial matters worth Rs65.11 billion and observes that the CAA suffered a loss of 75.43 billion due to illegal flight permits and the non-recovery of their arrears.

Further, the audit points out that illegal seizure of the authority’s land caused a loss of Rs144.88 billion and the CAA sustained a loss of Rs14.58 billion due to delays and non-receipt of dues from airlines and other entities. The audit report says illegal flight permits and occupation of authority's land caused a whopping loss of billions of rupees

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2324608/rs300bn-financial-irregularities-detected-in-caa
 
CAA hopes to resume licensing in February

KARACHI:
Pakistan’s Civil Aviation Authority (PCAA) hopes it can resume licensing pilots in February with the release of an International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) audit after a scandal over fake licenses, an authority official said.

The ICAO, the UN Aviation body, advised Pakistan in September 2020 to undertake immediate corrective action and suspend the issue of any new pilot licenses after false licences came to light following the crash of a Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) plane in May that year, in which 97 people were killed.

A nine-member ICAO team carried out an audit in Pakistan for 10 days that concluded on Friday.

“We are hopeful we will resume issuance of licensing following the release of the ICAO audit report expected in February,” Khaqan Murtaza, director general of the PCAA, told reporters on Monday.

The pilot licence scandal tainted Pakistan’s aviation industry and hurt flag carrier PIA, which was barred from flying to Europe and the United States.

In June last year, Pakistan grounded 262 airline pilots suspected of dodging their exams following checks of their qualifications.

The action was prompted by the preliminary report on an airliner crash in the city of Karachi last year, which found that the pilots had failed to follow standard procedures and disregarded alarms.

“The situation is that they have cleared us but a final report is awaited. The report is expected any time after mid-February,” Murtaza said.

The audit was carried out in six areas – airworthiness, flying standards, personal licensing and examination, air navigation services, aerodromes and aircraft accident.

The ICAO team visited Pakistan aeronautical complex, PIA offices and offices of other airlines.

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2333712/caa-hopes-to-resume-licensing-in-february
 
After the signing of the state airline’s agreement with a private company, Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Air Marshal Arshad Malik on Thursday told the media that national flag-carrier is yet to recover from the loss incurred by Federal Minister for Aviation Ghulam Sarwar’s statement.

The issue started in the aftermath of a PIA plane crash in Karachi, which led to the deaths of 97 passengers and crew members. While no pilots of the ill-fated aircraft had fake licences, the federal minister told the National Assembly (NA) a month later that 262 of 860 pilots in Pakistan did not sit in their exams themselves, rather they had someone else take the test for them. He claimed that people with fake degrees were appointed on political basis.

On Thursday, Malik highlighted how the minister’s statement led to the state airline being banned in many countries.

He deplored that no action has been taken against those who issued the fake degrees to pilots.

Speaking about PIA’s future strategy, the CEO said that the national flag-carrier is trying to reduce its deficit by finding new routes. He added that international and domestic routes are being expanded.

He also spoke about reforms, including the introduction of new aircraft to the state airline’s fleet. He added that four new aircraft would be added on dry lease.

He said that international auditors would complete their audit by the end of March. He added that they were hopeful that the ban imposed by the European Union (EU) would be lifted as well.

It is worth mentioning here that last month the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) concluded that Pakistan had resolved significant safety concerns. However, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) refused to lift the ban imposed on the state airline, saying that it was important to address the overall oversight capacity of the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority (PCCA).

During his media talk, Malik highlighted that Kuwait had suspended PIA’s flights while it continued to do business from Pakistan, however, the issue was resolved through talks.

The CEO also spoke about the upcoming launch of flight operations to Baku, Azerbaijan and Australia. He also warned of an increase in the airline’s fares due to rising oil prices in the global market.
 
Allegations of corruption of Rs2 trillion were levelled against DG Civil Aviation (CAA) Khaqan Murtaza and his team, Express News reported on Sunday.

The CAA Officers Employees Association penned a letter dated Feb 06 to Aviation Minister Khawaja Saad Rafique and secretary aviation, contending that Muratza was “not qualified” to hold office and expressing reservations that his team was likely to cause further harm to the country.

The letter alleges that over Rs1.3 trillion were lost due to the possession of airport land not being released.

Read NA panel moves to get CAA, PIA officials fired

It also states that fake licenses were issued for the national airline – the PIA and that additional damage was caused due the CAA’s failure to recover arrears of over Rs300 billion, while a loss of Rs10 billion was suffered by the airline in lease at Karachi Airport.

Furthermore, a loss of Rs400 billion has been incurred on the Rs450 billion property of Lahore Walton Airport.

The CAA Officers have also reportedly claimed that the clear instructions of the prime minister and his Cabinet were ignored in the case of Benazir Bhutto International Airport.

They further alleged that the DGCAA illegally registered two Land Cruisers and a Prado vehicle.
 
All PIA pilots want to quit, claims CAA DG
Authority’s chief tells Senate panel 35% tax deducted from their salaries

The director general of the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) on Thursday told a Senate panel that all pilots of the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) wanted to leave the national carrier.

Explaining the reason for this to the Senate Standing Committee on Aviation, CAA DG Khaqan Murtaza said around 35% tax was deducted from the salaries of the pilots.

He added that in addition to that, there was a tax imposed on flying hours of pilots too.

“Most of the times you hear about flight cancellations, the reason for this is the shortage of pilots,” he continued.

The meeting of the Senate Standing Committee on Aviation was held at the Parliament House, presided over by its chairman, Senator Hidayatullah.

Senator Mohsin Aziz, a member of the panel, inquired that the PIA would ever turn profitable in their lifetimes.

PIA CEO Air Vice Marshal Muhammad Amir Hayat replied that the national carrier was making operational profit.

Senator Aziz told him to inform the panel about the overall profit of the airline, and not just that of its operational.

“Where does the loss of billions of rupees come from every year?” the senator added.

The PIA CEO then switched to the subject of pilots’ licences.

He said there were 141 pilots with questionable licences.

He added that 69 of them had been cleared.

The CAA DG told the panel that action was being taken against those who had acquired fake licences as well as those who assisted them.

..
https://tribune.com.pk/story/2409160/all-pia-pilots-want-to-quit-claims-caa-dg
 
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