UAE Ambassador honors Pakistani pilot of first ever Emirates flight

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The Ambassador of UAE in Islamabad. Hamad Obaid Alzaabi, receives and honors Captain Fazal Ghani Mian, pilot of the first flight in the history of the Emirates Airline operated from Dubai to Karachi on Oct. 25, 1985. (Source: UAE Embassy in Islamabad twitter account)
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The Ambassador of UAE in Islamabad. Hamad Obaid Alzaabi, receives and honors Captain Fazal Ghani Mian, pilot of the first flight in the history of the Emirates Airline operated from Dubai to Karachi on Oct. 25, 1985. (Source: UAE Embassy in Islamabad twitter account)
Updated 04 July 2018
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UAE Ambassador honors Pakistani pilot of first ever Emirates flight

  • In the past three decades, Emirates has progressively expanded its operations and offering global connectivity

ISLAMABAD: The Ambassador of the United Arab Emirates, Hamad Obaid Alzaabi, on Tuesday, honored the first ever Emirates Airline flight, Captain (Retd) Fazal Ghani Mian.
Emirates and Pakistan have a shared history tracing back more than 30 years: The airline’s first flight went from Dubai to Karachi on Oct. 25, 1985.
“I came to Dubai on Oct. 1, 1985, and met with Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al-Maktoum and the Emirates Airline Managing Director Maurice Flanagan and their teams. We discussed the tasks ahead and how we wanted to proceed,” said the Pakistan International Airline’s flight Captain Mian.
On Oct. 18, a group of 100 pilots, flight and aircraft engineers and maintenance staff, among others, all came to Dubai to initiate the planning stages. “I was also tasked to train UAE National pilots. They were trained in Dubai and got their commercial licenses from the Civil Aviation Authority in Pakistan,” said Mian, while sharing his experience in a video of the Emirates’ 30th anniversary.
“I was blessed to be with very competent professionals to lay the foundation of Emirates” he added.
In the past three decades, Emirates has progressively expanded its operations and offering global connectivity and world-class services to Pakistan’s major cities including Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad, Peshawar, Sialkot and Multan.
This week, Emirates has announced the deployment of a one-off A380 service to Islamabad starting July 8. The airline’s iconic double-decker will make its inaugural arrival in Islamabad on a special flight EK2524/EK2525, the Emirates News Agency reported.
“We are proud to bring our flagship A380 aircraft to Islamabad,” said Sheikh Majid Al Mualla, divisional senior vice president Commercial Operations Center at Emirates. 


Militants kill 6 officers and a civilian in ambushes on police vehicles in northwest Pakistan

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Militants kill 6 officers and a civilian in ambushes on police vehicles in northwest Pakistan

  • Assailants ambushed a police vehicle and killed one officer in Kohat — When police reinforcements arrived minutes later, they launched another attack and killed five more officers and a civilian
  • No group claimed responsibility for this week’s attacks, but suspicion may fall on the Pakistani Taliban, also known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, or the TTP
PESHAWAR, Pakistan: A pair of attacks on police vehicles by suspected militants killed at least six police officers and a civilian in northwest Pakistan on Tuesday, authorities said.
The assailants ambushed a police vehicle and killed one officer in Kohat, a district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. When police reinforcements arrived minutes later, they launched another attack and killed five more officers and a civilian, police official Kamran Khan said.
Separately on Tuesday, a suicide bomber detonated explosives at a police post in Bukkur, a district in eastern Punjab province, killing two officers and wounding four others, police official Shahzad Rafiq said.
He provided no further details and only said officers were still investigating.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attacks, which have increased across the country in recent months.
President Asif Ali Zardari condemned the attacks in Kohat and Bukkur and offered condolences to the victims’ families.
The latest violence followed an attack on a paramilitary post in Karak on Monday, when a drone loaded with explosives wounded several officers. The attackers later ambushed two ambulances transporting the wounded, killing three officers and burning their bodies before fleeing. The driver of the second ambulance transported several wounded officers despite suffering burn injuries and authorities recovered the remains of the three officers.
No group claimed responsibility for this week’s attacks, but suspicion may fall on the Pakistani Taliban, also known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, or the TTP. The TTP is separate from, but closely allied with, Afghanistan’s Taliban. Islamabad has accused the group of operating from inside Afghanistan, a claim the TTP and Kabul deny.
Pakistan’s military said it killed at least 70 militants on Sunday in strikes along the Afghan border, targeting hideouts of Pakistani militants blamed for recent attacks inside the country.