Last survivor of 1965 PIA plane crash in Cairo passes away

The picture shared by Pakistani state media, APP, on August 17, 2024, shows Salahuddin Siddique, the last survivor of the 1965 PIA plane crash in Cairo. (APP)
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Updated 18 August 2024
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Last survivor of 1965 PIA plane crash in Cairo passes away

  • The plane carrying 128 passengers and crew crashed some 20 kilometers from the Cairo airport on May 20, 1965
  • Salahuddin Siddique, a former official of PIA’s Public Affairs department, was the last of six survivors of the crash

ISLAMABAD: Salahuddin Siddique, the last survivor of a Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) plane crash in Cairo in 1965, has passed away in London at the age of 93, Pakistani state media reported this week.

The PIA plane, which was on an inaugural flight from Karachi to London via Dhahran and Cairo, crashed on May 20, 1965, about 20 kilometers from the Cairo airport, with 128 passengers and crew aboard.

Siddique, a former general manager of the PIA’s Public Affairs department, was the last of six passengers who survived the tragic crash. He retired from the PIA in 1980, the state-run APP news agency reported.

“Today, we have lost a cherished colleague,” the report quoted a PIA spokesperson as saying on Saturday. “Salahuddin Siddique’s contributions to the national airline will always be remembered.”

Siddique, who had been living in London for many years, is survived by a son and a daughter, according to the report. His funeral was held in London, which was attended by a large number of relatives, friends, and well-wishers.

The 1965 PIA plane crash killed 122 people, including 21 journalists. APP Administrator A.K. Qureshi and National Press Trust Chairman Hayatuddin er among the victims.


Pakistan high court pauses tree-cutting in Islamabad until Feb. 2

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Pakistan high court pauses tree-cutting in Islamabad until Feb. 2

  • Islamabad High Court asks CDA to ‘explain and justify’ tree-cutting at next hearing
  • CDA officials say 29,000 trees were cut due to allergies, deny felling in green belts

ISLAMABAD: The Islamabad High Court has ordered an immediate halt to tree-cutting in the federal capital until Feb. 2, seeking justification from civic authorities over the legality of a large-scale felling drive that has seen thousands of trees removed in recent months.

The interim order, issued by a single-judge bench led by Justice Khadim Hussain Soomro, came during proceedings on a petition challenging the Capital Development Authority’s (CDA) tree-cutting operations in Islamabad’s Shakarparian area and H-8 sector.

At the outset of the hearing, the petitioner’s counsel argued that trees were being felled in violation of the Pakistan Environmental Protection Act 1997, the Islamabad Wildlife Ordinance 1979 and the city’s master plan.

“Respondents shall not cut trees till the next date of hearing,” Justice Soomro said in the court order released on Friday while referring to CDA officials.

“Respondents are directed to come fully prepared and to file paragraph-wise comments before the next date of hearing, along with a comprehensive report explaining the justification and legal basis for the cutting of trees,” he added.

According to the court order, the petitioner maintained that the CDA had not made any public disclosure regarding the legal basis for the operation and that the felling was causing environmental harm.

The petition sought access to the official record of tree-cutting activities and called for the penalization of CDA officials responsible for the act under relevant criminal and environmental laws.

It also urged the court to impose a moratorium on infrastructure projects in Islamabad, order large-scale replanting as compensation and constitute a judicial commission headed by a retired Supreme Court judge to probe the alleged violations.

CDA officials acknowledge around 29,000 paper mulberry trees have been cut in the capital in recent months, arguing that the species triggers seasonal allergies such as sneezing, itchy eyes and nasal congestion.

They also maintain that no trees have been removed from designated green belts and that the number of replacement trees planted exceeds those felled.

Designed in the 1960s by Greek architect Constantinos Doxiadis, Islamabad was conceived as a low-density city with green belts and protected natural zones at its core.

Critics, however, say the recent felling has extended beyond paper mulberry trees and question whether authorities are adhering to the city’s master plan and the legal protections governing forested and green areas.

The court has adjourned its hearing until Feb. 2, 2026.