KHAPLU, Gilgit-Baltistan: Sebastian Piotr Kawa, one of the Polish aviators who made history last week by flying above the 8,611-meter-high K2 mountain in northern Pakistan, hoped he had “cleared the path” for future pilots to achieve the same feat.
Kawa and Sebastian Lampart became the first pair to fly over the second-highest mountain in the world, K2, when they successfully flew their Ash25 glider over it on Saturday. Their two-seater glider was equipped only with oxygen and a small emergency engine. The pair took off from Skardu airport in Pakistan’s northern Gilgit-Baltistan region and then flew over the mountain.
But flying above K2 was no simple task. Mountain Challenger, the company that organized the tour, said apart from the high altitude, the weather at K2 was windy and flights in the Karakorum mountain range, where the mountains are located, are heavily restricted.
Kawa told Arab News there were no gliding activities in the area, and to fly over the mountain, the pair needed permissions from “a lot of institutions.”
“I hope we cleared the path for future pilots and gliding tourists because this place deserves it,” Kawa said. “It is a fantastic place to fly. I was in Nepal and I find Pakistan nicer.”
Kawa, a sports pilot who regularly participates in flying competitions around the world, has 24 medals from World Gliding Championships, 18 of them being gold.
“I always like challenges. I am a sports pilot participating in competitions,” he said. “This was always a challenge. Soaring sport is dedicated to mountains.”
Before gliding over K2, Kawa has flown above the Himalayas, including the 8,849-meter-high Mount Everest.
“I decided to do something I never had a chance to do flying in competition— to explore mountains where nobody had flown before,” Kawa explained.
He counted his most important wins in the Sailplane Grand Prix gliding competition, where the first three rounds were held in the French Alps, the Southern Alps in New Zealand and the Andes in South America.
Kawa said one needs skills and knowledge to glide in extremely high altitudes, pointing out that gliders do not use engines during flight.
“It is sometimes dangerous if you navigate around valleys without landings or heavy weather like thunderstorms,” he said, adding that heavy winds also trouble pilots.
“You may use it or it can cause a lot of trouble. For successful soaring, air has to move so flying in calm weather is not an option,” he explained.
‘FLYABLE BY GLIDER’
Kawa said he knew the Pakistani mountains would be a “fantastic place to fly” given the region they are in is much drier. It is not like Pokhara city in Nepal, Kawa said, where there is moist air from the Bay of Bengal or the Caucasus region which gets constant thunderstorms due to the Black Sea nearby.
“They are very flyable by glider,” the Polish pilot said. “It is very similar to the Alps where you can fly in any direction, it is not like one chain in the Andes but a vast area.”
He said the clouds in northern Pakistan are above the mountain peaks, adding that the high altitudes provide pilots a lot of space to fly around obstacles.
“I wish we could fly here in another season when it is windier because it allows us to fly much higher and faster,” Kawa said.
And mountains weren’t the only thing Kawa became fond of during his brief trip of Pakistan.
“I visited Pakistan for the first time and I need to say, the people are fantastic, very friendly,” he said.
‘Fantastic place to fly’: Polish aviator makes history with glider flight over Pakistan’s K2
https://arab.news/wj9dp
‘Fantastic place to fly’: Polish aviator makes history with glider flight over Pakistan’s K2
- Poland’s Sebastian Piotr Kawa was one half of pair who made history last week by gliding over K2 mountain
- Kawa hopes Polish pair “cleared the path” for future pilots to glide over the challenging 8,611-meter-high K2
Pakistan says responding to Afghan ‘offensive operations’ after border fire as tensions escalate
- Afghan Taliban spokesperson says “large-scale offensive operations” launched against Pakistani military bases
- Pakistan says Afghan forces opened “unprovoked” fire across multiple sectors along shared border
ISLAMABAD: Afghanistan’s Taliban authorities said on Thursday they had launched “large-scale offensive operations” against Pakistani military bases and installations, prompting Pakistan to say its forces were responding to what it described as unprovoked fire along the shared border.
The escalation follows Islamabad’s weekend airstrikes targeting what it said were Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and Daesh militant camps inside Afghanistan in response to a wave of recent bombings and attacks in Pakistan. Islamabad said the strikes killed over 100 militants, while Kabul said dozens of civilians were killed and condemned the attacks as a violation of its sovereignty.
In a post on social media platform X, Afghan government spokesperson Zabihullah Mujahid said Afghanistan had launched “large-scale offensive operations” in response to repeated violations by the Pakistani military.
Pakistan’s Ministry of Information said Afghan forces had initiated hostilities along multiple points of the frontier.
“Afghan Taliban regime unprovoked action along the Pakistan–Afghanistan border given an immediate, and effective response,” the ministry said in a statement.
The statement said Pakistani forces were targeting Taliban positions in the Chitral, Khyber, Mohmand, Kurram and Bajaur sectors, claiming heavy Afghan casualties and the destruction of multiple posts and equipment. It added that Pakistan would take all necessary measures to safeguard its territorial integrity and the security of its citizens.
Separately, security officials said Pakistani forces had carried out counterattacks in several border sectors.
“Pakistan’s security forces are giving a befitting reply to the unprovoked Afghan aggression with full force,” a security official said, declining to be named.
“The Pakistani security forces’ counter-attack destroyed Taliban’s hideouts and the Khawarij fled,” they added, referring to TTP militants.
The claims from both sides could not be independently verified.
Cross-border violence has intensified in recent weeks, with Pakistan blaming a surge in suicide bombings and militant attacks on militants it says are based in Afghanistan. Kabul denies providing safe havens to anti-Pakistan militant groups.
The clashes mark the third major escalation between the neighbors in less than a year. Similar Pakistani strikes last year triggered weeklong clashes before Qatar, Türkiye and other regional actors mediated a ceasefire in October.
The 2,600-kilometer (1,600-mile) frontier, a key trade and transit corridor linking Pakistan to landlocked Afghanistan and onward to Central Asia, has faced repeated closures amid tensions, disrupting commerce and humanitarian movement. Trade between the two nations has remained closed since October 2025.










