Pakistan plans to split Civil Aviation Authority into regulatory, operational units

This file photo taken on July 9, 2003, shows a view through an aircraft window of a Boeing 747 tail fin of an aircraft of Pakistan International Airlines (PIA). (AFP)
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Updated 31 July 2020
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Pakistan plans to split Civil Aviation Authority into regulatory, operational units

  • Federal cabinet and parliament will give a final go-ahead once the plan is ready, says aviation division official
  • The country may outsource airport operations in two different phases to improve the quality of service

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan plans to divide the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) into two separate regulatory and operational entities to improve the overall performance of its air travel industry, said a senior government functionary on Thursday. 

The proposal was floated in March 2019 but it came up for discussion once again after the country’s aviation minister, Ghulam Sarwar Khan, claimed last month that “almost 40 percent” of the country’s pilots had fake licenses. 

Soon after the controversy, aviation experts reiterated that the government should bifurcate the CAA operations to boost regulatory control over pilots and flight operations. 

“A special cabinet committee is deliberating on the bifurcation of Civil Aviation Authority,” Abdul Sattar Khokhar, senior joint-secretary at the Civil Aviation Division, told Arab News on Thursday. “Once it is done, this will go for a final approval to the federal cabinet and parliament.” 

“This will also help remove conflict of interest as currently the same organization is acting as a regulator and service provider,” he added while declining to give a timeframe for the finalization of the plan. 

“All of this is being processed and nothing is final at this stage,” he said. 

The government developed the National Aviation Policy in March 2019 to make CAA’s regulatory role completely independent of service provision within a span of two years. 

Under the plan, the CAA will be divided into the Pakistan Civil Aviation Regulatory Authority and the Pakistan Airports Authority. The scheme also seeks to outsource different airports of the country in two phases to improve their service quality. 

The Pakistan Airline Pilots’ Association (PALPA) said the government did not consult the body over the bifurcation plan, adding that its members had serious reservations over the functioning of CAA’s licensing branch. 

“The government should address the anomalies in the licensing process as the recent controversy over the so-called fake licenses has damaged Pakistan’s reputation the world over,” the association’s president, Chaudhry Salman, told Arab News. 

He said the government had grounded 101 pilots over “dubious” professional credentials, and they had all filed cases against the decision. 

“The government should impose fines or allow retesting instead of revoking pilots’ licenses,” Salman said. 

Aviation industry experts say the CAA bifurcation will not automatically streamline the industrial operations unless the government purged the whole institution of “black sheep and fraudsters.” 

“It is a good initiative, but the regulatory and the airport authorities must further be given to two different divisions to get the desired results,” Afsar Malik, aviation business consultant, told Arab News, adding that one of the units could report to the aviation division and the other could work under the cabinet division. 

Malik said the outsourcing of airports could help the government improve its service and revenue, but for that “a complete business plan should be formulated beforehand.”


Bangladesh approves new rice imports from Pakistan amid price pressures

Updated 23 December 2025
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Bangladesh approves new rice imports from Pakistan amid price pressures

  • The deal follows Bangladesh’s resumption of direct rice trade with Pakistan earlier this year ⁠for the first time since independence in 1971
  • Diplomatic ties between the two nations have improved since the ouster of prime minister Sheikh Hasina after mass protests last year

DHAKA: Bangladesh has approved the import of 50,000 metric tons of white rice from Pakistan under a government-to-government deal as ​part of efforts to stabilize domestic prices, officials said on Tuesday.

The Cabinet Committee on Government Purchase cleared the deal at $395 per ton, reinforcing Dhaka’s renewed trade engagement with Islamabad.

Rice prices in Bangladesh have jumped by between 15 percent and 20 percent over ‌the past ‌year, with medium-quality ‌rice ⁠selling ​at about ‌80 taka ($0.66) per kilogram. Despite increased imports and the removal of duties to ease supply constraints, prices for the staple grain remain stubbornly high.

The deal follows Bangladesh’s resumption of direct rice trade with Pakistan earlier this year ⁠for the first time since independence in 1971. In ‌February, it imported 50,000 ‍tons of rice from ‍Pakistan at $499 per ton under a ‍similar agreement.

Diplomatic ties between the two South Asian nations have improved since an interim government led by Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus took office after ​mass protests forced then prime minister Sheikh Hasina to flee to neighboring ⁠India last year.

Formerly East Pakistan, Bangladesh gained independence after a nine-month war in 1971, and relations with Pakistan have remained fraught in the decades since the conflict.

Separately, the government approved another 50,000 tons of parboiled rice through an international tender, part of a series of recent purchases aimed at cooling local prices. India’s Pattabhi Agro Foods secured ‌the contract with the lowest bid of $355.77 per ton.