Man booked to fly on crashed PK-8303 saved by system error

Syed Mustafa Ahmed photographed in Lahore during coronavirus rescue and relief work on May 8, 2020. (Photo courtesy: Syed Mustafa Ahmed)
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Updated 03 June 2020
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Man booked to fly on crashed PK-8303 saved by system error

  • Digital marketer and philanthropist tried three times to book himself on ill-fated PIA flight
  • The airbus A320 crashed into colony of homes on Friday afternoon, with 97 people confirmed dead

LAHORE: Syed Mustafa Ahmed tried three times on Thursday to confirm payment online for seat 13-A on Pakistan International Airlines flight PK-8303 from Lahore to Karachi, but each time, a system error stopped him from finalizing the booking. 
Ahmed was desperate-- he needed to get into Karachi on Friday before the 5 p.m. coronavirus lockdowns cut off transport links and the PIA flight was his best bet.
“I booked myself on seat 13-A, but when the payment option came, there was a system error. I tried three times, but in the last step, the website just wouldn’t let me pay and confirm my booking,” Ahmed told Arab News via telephone.
Frustrated, he called a friend who worked in a different airline to help him sort the issue out. 
“I have a friend who works in Serene Airlines, and I told him I need to take this flight. I asked him for his help with the booking. We tried again, but it just wasn’t happening.”
On Friday afternoon, the A320 Airbus Ahmed had been desperately trying to get aboard crashed into a congested colony of homes moments before its scheduled landing in Karachi killing 97 people on board. Two survivors were pulled from the wreckage.




A screen grab of Ahmed's Pakistan International Airlines PK-8303 booking before a system error stopped him from completing payment on May 21, 2020.

The Karachi-based owner of digital marketing social enterprise, MMarkent, had just returned to Lahore from Gilgit after spending 90 days away from home as part of coronavirus relief efforts for a child and animal rescue and relief campaign he runs called Servants of Humanity-- which he says is inspired by the life of Abdus Sattar Edhi.
“I was impatient to get back home to Karachi to get started on the packing and distribution of Eid packages for over a hundred orphaned children we sponsor around the city,” Ahmed said. 
“I wanted the PIA flight because its timings ensured I landed before the 5 p.m. citywide lockdown. When I was unable to proceed ahead with payment, my friend at Serene told me to travel on his free ticket with his airline instead-- except the flight would leave at 4 p.m. Thursday.”
“I was hesitant, because this would mean I would land later than I wanted. But he insisted I take him up on his offer and consider the money I saved as an Eid donation for the children we sponsored. And so I agreed,” he said.




Mustafa Ahmed in Lahore's Allama Iqbal Town as part of relief work during coronavirus curfews in March 2020. (Photo courtesy: Syed Mustafa Ahmed)

Once Ahmed had landed safely in Karachi on Thursday evening, a google alert pinged on his phone.
“It said the system error had been dealt with and would I like to proceed with my PIA booking. By then, I was already home.”
“When the plane crashed this afternoon, I was overwhelmed with phone calls from friends and family. I’d forgotten to tell many of them I was taking an earlier flight. They thought I was on PK-8303,” Ahmed said.
“I suppose you could call it luck, but it shows me that while we are making our plans, God has other plans for us-- and God had planned that today, this flight was not for me.”


Pakistan says on ‘strong path’ toward polio eradication after last vaccination drive of 2025

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Pakistan says on ‘strong path’ toward polio eradication after last vaccination drive of 2025

  • Pakistani health volunteers vaccinated over 44.6 million children from Dec. 15-21 campaign
  • Pakistan has reported 30 polio cases this year and has not reported a single one since September

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s National Emergency Operations Center (NEOC) said on Tuesday that the nation was on a “strong path” toward polio eradication, after authorities conducted the last nationwide anti-polio vaccination drive of the year a few days earlier. 

Pakistani health authorities conducted the last nationwide anti-polio vaccination of 2025 from Dec. 15-21. The NEOC earlier this week said it had vaccinated a total of 44.6 million children under the age of five during the seven-day campaign across the country. 

Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan are the only two countries where transmission of the wild poliovirus has never been interrupted, posing a risk to global eradication efforts. The virus, which can cause irreversible paralysis, has no cure and can only be prevented through repeated oral vaccination.

“The NEOC reaffirms that Pakistan is on a strong path toward polio eradication,” the authority said in a statement. 

It noted that health volunteers vaccinated over 22.8 million children in Punjab, over 1 million in Sindh, over 7.1 million in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), and over 2.5 million children in Balochistan during the campaign. 

In Islamabad, over 450,000 children were vaccinated while in Gilgit-Baltistan, over 274,000 children and in Azad Kashmir over 714,000 were given polio drops. 

The NEOC said Pakistan’s polio cases declined from 74 in 2024 to 30 in 2025, reflecting measurable progress compared to the previous year.

“No polio cases have been reported since September 2025, highlighting the remarkable progress achieved through consistent and comprehensive immunization efforts across the country,” it said. 

Health officials say insecurity remains a major obstacle. Polio workers and their security escorts have repeatedly been targeted in militant attacks, particularly in parts of KP and Balochistan, complicating efforts to reach every child.

A gun attack targeting a polio vaccination team in Pakistan’s northwestern Bajaur district on Dec. 16 left one police constable and a civilian dead.

Natural disasters, including flooding, have also disrupted vaccination campaigns in recent years.

“The NEOC calls upon all stakeholders, including parents, community leaders and health workers, to continue their active support,” the center said.