Pakistan’s loss-making national airline likely to be privatized by Nov. — officials

This file photo shows for the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) headquarters in Islamabad on April 12, 2016. (REUTERS)
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Updated 01 September 2025
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Pakistan’s loss-making national airline likely to be privatized by Nov. — officials

  • Pakistan is looking to privatize PIA to raise funds, reform state-owned enterprises as envisaged under a $7 billion IMF program
  • In July, the South Asian country prequalified four investors for the sale of a 51-100 percent stake in the struggling national airline

KARACHI: Pakistan is likely to complete long-delayed privatization of its loss-making national carrier, the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), by November this year, officials said on Monday, as the government pushes ahead with key reforms to revive the struggling economy.

Cash-strapped Pakistan is looking to privatize the debt-ridden PIA to raise funds and reform state-owned enterprises as envisaged under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) program secured last year.

In July, Pakistan prequalified four investors for the sale of PIA. Among the bidding groups, one is a consortium of major industrial firms Lucky Cement, Hub Power Holdings, Kohat Cement and Metro Ventures. Another is led by investment firm Arif Habib Corp. and includes fertilizer producer Fatima Fertilizer, private education operator The City School, and real estate firm Lake City Holdings. Additionally, Fauji Fertilizer Company, a military-backed conglomerate, and Pakistani airline Airblue, have been approved to bid for PIA.

On Monday, officials briefed the Senate Standing Committee on Privatization on the compliance status of previous recommendations, the impact of phasing out the single-buyer model and latest developments in the privatization of state-owned enterprises, including the PIA, according to the Senate Secretariat.

“[PIA’s] privatization is expected by November 2025,” the Senate Secretariat quoted officials as telling the privatization committee. “Four companies are participating, and they will need to form consortiums with established airlines to operate PIA. Two applicants were disqualified for not meeting standards.”

Pakistan has been seeking to sell a 51-100 percent stake in the struggling national airline to raise funds and reform cash-draining, state-owned enterprises as envisaged under a $7 billion International Monetary Fund program.

The airline has been one of the government’s most costly liabilities, which has accumulated over $2.5 billion in losses in roughly a decade and been surviving on repeated bailouts that have weighed heavily on Pakistan’s strained budget.

Late last year, a deal fell through after a potential buyer reportedly offered $36 million for a 60 percent stake in the national flag carrier, a fraction of the asking price of approximately $303 million.

Earlier this year, the debt-ridden airline resumed flights to Europe and the UK after a four-and-a-half-year ban on the airline was lifted by the European and British regulators. PIA was banned in June 2020 from flying to the European Union (EU), the United Kingdom and the United States, a month after one of its Airbus A-320s plunged into a residential neighborhood in Karachi, killing nearly 100 people.

The airline still remains barred from flying to the United States.


Pakistan military says 12 militants killed in counter-terror operations in southwest

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Pakistan military says 12 militants killed in counter-terror operations in southwest

  • Pakistan military says “Indian-sponsored terrorists” were killed in southwestern Kalat district on Dec. 6
  • Development takes place day after military said it gunned down five militants in Balochistan’s Dera Bugti area

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani security forces killed 12 “Indian-sponsored terrorists” in the southwestern Balochistan province, the military’s media wing said on Sunday, vowing to purge “terrorism” from the country.

The security operation was carried out in Balochistan’s Kalat district on Dec. 6, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the military’s media wing, said in a statement. It said the militants belonged to Indian proxy “Fitna al Hindustan.”

The military uses this term to describe ethnic Baloch militant groups who demand independence from Pakistan. Islamabad accuses New Delhi of arming and funding these separatist groups, charges India has always denied. 

“Weapons, ammunition and explosives were also recovered from the terrorists, who remained actively involved in numerous terrorist activities in the area,” the ISPR said. 

The military said that it was carrying out sanitization operations in the area to eliminate other “terrorists,” vowing it will continue with its relentless counter-terror campaign to purge militancy. 

The development took place a day after the Pakistan military said it had gunned down 14 militants in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and Balochistan provinces. 

Balochistan, Pakistan’s largest province by since yet its most backward by almost all social and economic indicators, has suffered from a bloody separatist insurgency for decades. 

The most ethnic Baloch militant group that has mounted attacks against law enforcement and civilians in the area is the Balochistan Liberation Army.

These militant outfits accuse the military and federal government of denying the local Baloch population a share in the province’s mineral wealth, charges Islamabad denies.