Etihad Airways resumes Abu Dhabi–Peshawar flights after 11 years

Officials gesture during the ceremony to mark the resumption of Etihad Airways operations as the first flight from Abu Dhabi lands in Peshawar on September 29, 2025. (Handout/PAA)
Short Url
Updated 29 September 2025
Follow

Etihad Airways resumes Abu Dhabi–Peshawar flights after 11 years

  • Flight greeted with water salute at Peshawar airport
  • Suspension followed 2014 gun attack on Pakistan flight

KARACHI: Etihad Airways resumed flights to Peshawar in northwestern Pakistan on Monday after an 11-year suspension, the Pakistan Airports Authority (PAA) said, marking a significant expansion of the United Arab Emirates carrier’s network in South Asia.

The Abu Dhabi–Peshawar route was halted in 2014 after a Pakistan International Airlines flight arriving from Saudi Arabia was fired upon while landing at Bacha Khan International Airport, killing a passenger.

Etihad and Emirates both suspended operations in the wake of the incident at a time of heightened militant violence in the region. Etihad had previously paused services in 2012 after an attack on the airport.

Flight EY276 landed in Peshawar on Monday morning for the first time since the suspension and was welcomed with a traditional water salute by airport authorities.

“Etihad Airways will now operate five weekly flights between Abu Dhabi and Peshawar on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday,” the PAA said in a statement.

The resumption makes Etihad the third international airline to launch services from Bacha Khan International Airport this year, following Fly Dubai and Saudi carrier Flyadeal.

Officials said the new flights would offer passengers greater choice and improve regional connectivity.

The move comes as Etihad, owned by Abu Dhabi’s $225 billion sovereign wealth fund ADQ, emerges from a multi-year restructuring and management overhaul aimed at streamlining operations and expanding routes.

The airline is seeking to capture growing demand for travel between the Gulf and Pakistan, home to one of the world’s largest overseas Pakistani communities.


EU, Pakistan sign €60 million loan agreement for clean drinking water in Karachi

Updated 17 December 2025
Follow

EU, Pakistan sign €60 million loan agreement for clean drinking water in Karachi

  • Project will finance rehabilitation, construction of water treatment facilities in Karachi city, says European Investment Bank
  • As per a report in 2023, 90 percent of water samples collected from various places in city was deemed unfit for drinking

ISLAMABAD: The European Investment Bank (EIB) and Pakistan’s government on Wednesday signed a €60 million loan agreement, the first between the two sides in a decade, to support the delivery of clean drinking water in Karachi, the EU said in a statement. 

The Karachi Water Infrastructure Framework, approved in August this year by the EIB, will finance the rehabilitation and construction of water treatment facilities in Pakistan’s most populous city of Karachi to increase safe water supply and improve water security. 

The agreement was signed between the two sides at the sidelines of the 15th Pak-EU Joint Commission in Brussels, state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported. 

“Today, the @EIB signed its first loan agreement with Pakistan in a decade: a €60 million loan supporting the delivery of clean drinking water for #Karachi,” the EU said on social media platform X. 

Radio Pakistan said the agreement reflects Pakistan’s commitment to modernize essential urban services and promote climate-resilient infrastructure.

“The declaration demonstrates the continued momentum in Pakistan-EU cooperation and highlights shared priorities in sustainable development, public service delivery, and climate and environmental resilience,” it said. 

Karachi has a chronic clean drinking water problem. As per a Karachi Water and Sewerage Corporation (KWSC) study conducted in 2023, 90 percent of water from samples collected from various places in the city was deemed unsafe for drinking purposes, contaminated with E. coli, coliform bacteria, and other harmful pathogens. 

The problem has forced most residents of the city to get their water through drilled motor-operated wells (known as ‘bores’), even as groundwater in the coastal city tends to be salty and unfit for human consumption.

Other options for residents include either buying unfiltered water from private water tanker operators, who fill up at a network of legal and illegal water hydrants across the city, or buying it from reverse osmosis plants that they visit to fill up bottles or have delivered to their homes.

The EU provides Pakistan about €100 million annually in grants for development and cooperation. This includes efforts to achieve green inclusive growth, increase education and employment skills, promote good governance, human rights, rule of law and ensure sustainable management of natural resources.