State-run Pakistan International Airlines has resumed direct flights to Europe following a decision by the European Union’s aviation safety agency to lift a four-year ban over safety standards
Relatives in Pakistan grieve
A post from Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) created an uproar on social media after an advertisement showed a plane headed towards the famed Eiffel Tower in France with the caption ‘Paris, we’re coming today.
Pakistan's state-run carrier PIA has resumed flights to Europe after the EU lifted a four-year safety ban. A flight operated by state-run Pakistan International Airlines took off for Paris from Islamabad on Friday morning as the carrier resumed direct flights to Europe following the lifting of a European Union ban.
Pakistan’s national airline says that an advertisement showing a plane heading toward the Eiffel Tower was never intended to evoke the memories of the Sept. 11 attacks.
After a long-awaited resumption of Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) flights to Europe, the national flag carrier took to the skies of Europe once again, with its first flight to Paris touching down at Charles de Gaulle Airport on Friday.
Dar instructed Ministries of Foreign Affairs, Interior to ensure swift, efficient assistance for Pakistani victims
ISLAMABAD: The first direct flight from Islamabad to Paris took off on Friday as the Pakistan International Airlines resumed its long-awaited flights to Europe in more than four years, marking
Pakistan International Airlines resumes European flights after 4-year ban, with inaugural flight to Paris, meeting EU aviation standards.
Mohammad Ali Jinnah instructed an industrialist to set up a national airline for Pakistan. Today, PIA is in significant debt, with quality issues and scandals around pilot certification. Here's its story.
"Is this an advertisement or threat?" one person wrote online, joining a chorus of criticism. Pakistan's prime minister has now ordered an inquiry into the controversial ad.
By Elisa Martinuzzi DAVOS, Switzerland (Reuters) -Pakistan has agreed terms for a $1 billion loan with two Middle Eastern banks at a 6%-7% interest rate, its Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb told Reuters on Tuesday,