PM orders to keep Torkham border crossing open ‘round the clock’

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Security officials and bystanders look on as a loaded truck passes through Torkham border. (AN photo)
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Men coming from Afghanistan move down a corridor between security fences at the border post in Torkham. (REUTERS/File)
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Afghan Ambassador to Pakistan Atif Mashal visited Torkham and met with officials on Jan. 16, 2019. (Photo courtesy: Afghanistan’s Embassy in Islamabad)
Updated 29 January 2019
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PM orders to keep Torkham border crossing open ‘round the clock’

  • Step will be instrumental in boosting bilateral trade, says the premier
  • Torkham is a major border crossing between Pakistan and Afghanistan

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan has ordered to keep the main border crossing with Afghanistan at Torkham open ‘round the clock.’
“I have tasked the relevant govt stakeholders to make necessary arrangements for the Torkhum border to work round the clock within next 6 months,” the PM stated in a tweet Monday night.

Khan hoped in his message that “this step will be instrumental in boosting bilateral trade & enhancing people to people contacts between the two brotherly countries.”
Torkham is a major border crossing between Pakistan and Afghanistan, at Khyber tribal district, located along the international border between the two countries.
On January 16 this year, Afghan Ambassador to Pakistan Atif Mashal visited Torkham and requested Pakistani authorities to increase the passport entry windows.
The Ambassador also “demanded facilitation to ladies, patients & elders at the crossing point,” the Afghan Embassy in Islamabad said in tweet after Ambassador Mashal’s visit to Torkham.


Pakistan’s PIA to resume London flights from Mar. 29 after six-year gap

Updated 30 December 2025
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Pakistan’s PIA to resume London flights from Mar. 29 after six-year gap

  • Newly privatized airline says will operate four weekly flights from Islamabad to London
  • PIA is already operating three fllights per week to British city Manchester, says airline

ISLAMABAD: The newly privatized Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) will operate direct flights to London starting Mar. 29, 2026, after six years, its spokesperson confirmed on Tuesday. 

The PIA resumed its flight operations to the UK in October this year with its inaugural flight to Manchester. The airline is currently operating three weekly flights to the British city. 

Britain lifted restrictions on Pakistani carriers in July, nearly half a decade after grounding them following a 2020 PIA Airbus A320 crash in Karachi that killed 97 people. The disaster was followed by claims of irregularities in pilot licensing, which led to bans in the US, UK and the European Union. 

“Pakistan International Airlines has announced the expansion of its operations in the United Kingdom with the resumption of flights to London,” the airline’s spokesperson said in a statement. 

“Starting Mar. 29, PIA will operate four weekly flights from Islamabad to London.”

The airline said that the London flights will be operated from Heathrow Airport’s Terminal 4, which it said is recognized as one of its most modern terminals. 

“London was PIA’s very first international destination and remains one of its most important and attractive routes,” the spokesperson said. 

Pakistan’s government succeeded in its frequent efforts to privatize the airline this month after a consortium, led by Arif Habib Group, on Dec. 23 secured a 75 percent stake in PIA for Rs135 billion ($482 million) after several rounds of bidding, valuing the airline at Rs180 billion ($643 million).

The sale marked Pakistan’s most aggressive attempt in decades to reform the debt-ridden national airline, which had accumulated more than $2.8 billion in financial losses. The government said it would end decades of state-funded bailouts and help revive the airline.

In an exclusive interview with Arab News this week, the airline’s new owner Arif Habib said he plans to renovate PIA planes, improve maintenance and flight schedule, and bring in new aircraft to revive the carrier.

Habib said he sees the region comprising the UK, the US and Canada as a “lucrative market” for the airline’s business. 

“There we can increase the frequency of the flight,” he said. “We will also try to run flights to Canada from Karachi, Lahore, and I think it’s already in Islamabad.”