Flag carrier PIA to be run by new owners from April, says Pakistan official

View of a Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) passenger plane, taken through a glass panel, at Islamabad International Airport, Pakistan, on October 3, 2023. (REUTERS/File)
Short Url
Updated 24 December 2025
Follow

Flag carrier PIA to be run by new owners from April, says Pakistan official

  • A Pakistani consortium clinched the sale with a Rs135 billion bid after last year’s failed privatization efforts
  • Government says the deal will inject fresh capital into PIA, with fallback to second-highest bidder if needed

KARACHI: Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) is expected to be run by a new owner from April next year and receive fresh capital under a deal to privatize the flag carrier, the country’s privatization chief said on Wednesday.

A consortium headed by the Arif Habib Corporation emerged as the top bidder in a live-televised auction for a 75 percent stake in PIA on Tuesday, marking a breakthrough for the government’s long-delayed privatization of the carrier.

The Arif Habib consortium offered 135 billion rupees ($482.14 million), surpassing a government ‌reserve price of ‌100 billion rupees, in a sharp turnaround from last ‌year’s ⁠failed sale ​attempt.

Muhammad Ali, ‌the privatization adviser to the prime minister, told Reuters in an online interview that the state expects a new owner to be running the airline by April, subject to approvals.

The process now moves to final approvals by the Privatization Commission board and the cabinet, expected within days, with contract signing likely within two weeks and financial close after a 90-day period to meet regulatory and legal conditions.

Ali said the government would receive about 10 billion rupees ⁠in cash upfront and retain a 25 percent stake valued at around 45 billion rupees.

The deal was structured ‌to inject fresh capital into the airline rather than simply ‍transfer ownership, he said.

“We did not ‍want a situation where the government sells the airline, takes its money and ‍the company still collapses,” Ali said.

The winning consortium also comprises fertilizer maker Fatima, private school network City Schools and real estate firm Lake City Holdings Limited.

Ali said Fauji Fertilizer Company, a military-run conglomerate, did not bid but could still join the winning consortium as a partner, noting the ​buyer can add up to two partners – including a consortium partner or a foreign airline – if they meet the qualifying criteria.

Allowing partners adds ⁠financial strength and could bring global aviation expertise, he said.

IMF PRESSURE

Ali said safeguards, including retained earnest money and an additional payment on signing, would allow the government to move to the second-highest bidder if the deal fails to close.

On labor, Ali said the buyer must retain all employees for 12 months after the transaction, with contracts unchanged, adding that the PIA workforce has already shrunk in recent years.

The sale is closely watched by the International Monetary Fund, which has pressed Pakistan to halt losses at state-owned enterprises.

Ali said the privatization was a key test of Pakistan’s reform credibility with the IMF, adding that failure to offload loss-making state firms risked renewed pressure on public finances.

He said closing the deal ‌would signal momentum on reforms and privatizations, adding that the government was working through a pipeline of future transactions once PIA closes.


EU criticizes Pakistan over jailing of rights lawyers, flags free speech concerns

Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

EU criticizes Pakistan over jailing of rights lawyers, flags free speech concerns

  • EU says the convictions of Imaan Mazari-Hazir, Hadi Ali Chattha violate freedom of expression
  • Both lawyers were arrested last week over social media posts under Pakistan’s cybercrime laws

KARACHI: The European Union on Thursday criticized Pakistan over the conviction of two human rights lawyers for their social media activity, saying the ruling ran counter to freedom of expression and the independence of the legal profession, core democratic principles that Islamabad is committed to uphold under international law.

Imaan Mazari-Hazir and her husband Hadi Ali Chattha were arrested last Friday as they were on their way to a court appearance and were later remanded to two weeks in judicial custody.

Authorities accused them of violating the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Act (PECA) over posts on X that they said incited ethnic divisions and portrayed the military as being involved in “terrorism.” Both deny the allegations.

“The conviction of human rights lawyers Imaan Mazari and Hadi Ali Chattha over social media activity goes against freedom of expression and independence of lawyers,” Anouar El Anouni, the EU’s spokesperson for foreign affairs and security policy, said in a post on X. “These are not only key democratic principles but also part of Pakistan’s international human rights commitments.”

Pakistan is one of the largest beneficiaries of the EU’s Generalized Scheme of Preferences Plus (GSP+), which grants duty-free access to most European markets in return for implementing 27 international conventions covering human rights, labor standards, environmental protection and good governance.

Pakistan’s GSP+ status came under scrutiny in the past after, in April 2021, the European Parliament adopted a resolution calling for an immediate review, citing concerns over violence against religious minorities, curbs on media freedom and broader human rights issues.

Earlier this week, lawyers in Pakistan’s capital went on strike and announced plans to stage a protest against the court ruling, which handed Mazari-Hazir and Chattha a cumulative 17-year sentence.
The Pakistani government has not yet responded to the EU statement.