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Ƶ’s Flyadeal launches flight operations to Pakistan’s Peshawar, Islamabad

Ƶ’s Flyadeal launches flight operations to Pakistan’s Peshawar, Islamabad
Ƶ’s Flyadeal plane sits on the tarmac at at Bacha Khan International Airport in Peshawar, Pakistan, on August 25, 2025. (Flyadeal)
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Updated 25 August 2025

Ƶ’s Flyadeal launches flight operations to Pakistan’s Peshawar, Islamabad

Ƶ’s Flyadeal launches flight operations to Pakistan’s Peshawar, Islamabad
  • Flyadeal to operate two weekly flights from Riyadh to Peshawar every Monday and Wednesday, says civil aviation authority 
  • Says services to Peshawar and Islamabad will strengthen connectivity, facilitate passenger convenience and boost bilateral ties

KARACHI: Ƶ’s low-cost airline Flyadeal has expanded its operations in Pakistan with inaugural flights to Peshawar and Islamabad cities recently, the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority (PCAA) said in a statement on Monday. 

Jeddah-based Flyadeal, a sister company of Saudia Airlines, launched operations in Pakistan with an inaugural flight to the southern port city of Karachi on Feb. 1. On Sunday, the airline’s inaugural flight to Pakistan’s capital arrived at the Islamabad International Airport from Riyadh with 65 passengers on board, while the return flight left with 172 passengers. 

On Monday, the airline expanded its operations in the country further by operating its first flight to Peshawar. The flight arrived in the northwestern city’s Bacha Khan International Airport from Riyadh. 

“Flyadeal will now operate two weekly flights from Riyadh to Peshawar every Monday and Wednesday,” the PCAA said. 

Meanwhile, the airline will operate a weekly flight to Islamabad on Sundays, the statement added. 

“The Pakistan Airports Authority (PAA) welcomed Flyadeal’s entry into Pakistan’s aviation market, noting that the new services to Peshawar and Islamabad will strengthen connectivity, facilitate passenger convenience, and further boost ties between Pakistan and Ƶ,” the PCAA said. 

Flyadeal’s move to expand operations to Pakistan comes as Ƶ seeks to boost its tourism sector under the Vision 2030 program, which aims to attract over 150 million domestic and international tourists annually to the Kingdom by the end of the decade.

Every year, thousands of Pakistanis travel to the Kingdom and back for tourism and religious reasons. Ƶ is home to over 2.5 million Pakistani expatriates who live and work in the Kingdom.


Pakistan, Bangladesh agree to advance regional cooperation after high-level visits — FO

Pakistan, Bangladesh agree to advance regional cooperation after high-level visits — FO
Updated 20 sec ago

Pakistan, Bangladesh agree to advance regional cooperation after high-level visits — FO

Pakistan, Bangladesh agree to advance regional cooperation after high-level visits — FO
  • Pakistan deputy PM, commerce minister last week visited Dhaka as both nations sought to mend decades of strained ties
  • The trips saw multiple agreements signed, including a visa waiver for diplomats and establishment of joint trade group

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and Bangladesh on Monday reaffirmed their commitment to strengthening bilateral ties and advancing regional cooperation, the Pakistani foreign office said, following a series of high-level engagements between officials of the two countries over the weekend.

Senior Pakistani officials, including Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar and Commerce Minister Jam Kamal, last week undertook high-level visits to Bangladesh as both nations seek to mend decades of strained ties amid shifting regional power balances.

The trips saw multiple agreements signed, including a visa waiver for diplomats, the establishment of a joint working group on trade, and cooperation between foreign service academies, with discussions centered on boosting economic cooperation and investment.

On Monday, Dar again met Touhid Hossain, the Bangladeshi adviser on foreign affairs, on the sidelines of an Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) meeting after holding extensive discussions with him in Dhaka Bangladesh over the weekend.

“Reaffirming the new momentum in Pakistan–Bangladesh relations, we looked forward to seeing the fruits of our cooperation across diverse fields,” Dar said in a statement shared by the foreign office.

“Also agreed to work closely on strengthening bilateral ties and advancing regional cooperation for shared prosperity.”

Pakistan and Bangladesh were once one nation, but they split in 1971 as a result of a bloody civil war, which saw the part previously referred to as East Pakistan seceding to form the independent nation of Bangladesh. In the years since, Bangladeshi leaders, particularly ex-PM Sheikh Hasina, chose to maintain close ties with India.

Ties between Pakistan and Bangladesh have warmed up since Hasina’s ouster as a result of a student-led uprising in August, witnessing a marked improvement. Both countries began sea trade last year, expanding government-to-government commerce in February.

Dar met Yunus on Sunday and apprised the Bangladeshi chief adviser of his engagements in Dhaka and the key outcomes of his two-day visit, thanking for the “warm hospitality” extended to him and his delegation, according to the Pakistani foreign office.

“The discussion covered revival of old connections between the two countries, promoting youth linkages, enhancing connectivity, and augmenting trade and economic cooperation,” the Pakistani foreign office said after the meeting.


Berlin urged to help Afghans stranded in Pakistan ‘before it’s too late’

Berlin urged to help Afghans stranded in Pakistan ‘before it’s too late’
Updated 25 August 2025

Berlin urged to help Afghans stranded in Pakistan ‘before it’s too late’

Berlin urged to help Afghans stranded in Pakistan ‘before it’s too late’
  • The Afghans, previously offered refuge in Germany, are now caught between Chancellor Merz’s tougher policy and Pakistan expulsions
  • The rights organizations say Germany must ‘drastically speed up’ security checks for those who had been accepted under past scheme

BERLIN: Dozens of organizations on Monday urged the German government to act “before it’s too late” to help thousands of Afghans threatened with deportation from Pakistan whom Berlin had previously offered sanctuary.

In an appeal organized by the German Bar Association, more than 50 groups and institutions said swift action was needed to save the more than 2,000 stranded Afghans from being sent back to their Taliban-run homeland.

The Afghans are part of a group previously offered refuge in Germany but now caught between Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s tougher immigration policy and a wave of expulsions from Pakistan.

The organizations, including Amnesty International, Reporters Without Borders and the Caritas charity, said the government must “drastically speed up” the process of security checks for those who had been accepted under the scheme.

In addition, those who have been approved must be “immediately evacuated,” they argued.

The groups stressed that those at risk included “lawyers, judges, human rights activists, journalists and members of particularly endangered minorities.”

“Germany bears a special responsibility toward the people who have placed their trust in us and whose commitment to democracy, human rights and the rule of law has now made them targets in Afghanistan,” the organizations said.

Last week, the German government said 450 Afghans waiting to come to Germany had been arrested in recent raids by Pakistani authorities, which have been carrying out a crackdown on Afghans without legal residency.

The German foreign ministry said on Monday it was in contact with more than 200 of those arrested who had been deported to Afghanistan.

The reception scheme was initially set up under the previous chancellor Olaf Scholz after the Taliban’s 2021 takeover.

It was intended to provide refuge to those who had worked with German forces in Afghanistan or who were at particular risk from the Taliban.

However, Merz made restrictions on immigration one of his key promises when taking office in May and his government has put the scheme under review.


PIA suspends Lahore–Paris flights to prioritize UK resumption amid ‘low demand’

PIA suspends Lahore–Paris flights to prioritize UK resumption amid ‘low demand’
Updated 25 August 2025

PIA suspends Lahore–Paris flights to prioritize UK resumption amid ‘low demand’

PIA suspends Lahore–Paris flights to prioritize UK resumption amid ‘low demand’
  • PIA began Lahore–Paris flights on June 18 months after it resumed European flights
  • The airline was banned by EU, UK and US in 2020 after a deadly crash that killed 100

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) will scale back operations to France by suspending its Lahore–Paris flights in mid-September, a PIA spokesperson said on Monday, adding the move is linked to planned resumption of services to the United Kingdom (UK).

PIA resumed flights to Europe in January after a four-and-a-half-year ban on the airline was lifted by European regulators. The airline began two weekly flights between Lahore and Paris on June 18.

PIA spokesperson Abdullah Hafeez told Arab News the last Paris–Lahore flight will operate on Sept. 12, while the final Lahore–Paris flight will depart from the country on Sept. 17.

“The Lahore–Paris route is not being permanently closed but has been temporarily suspended to prioritize operations to the United Kingdom (UK) as passenger demand is currently low during the lean season,” Hafeez said, adding the airline is expected to resume UK flight operations by mid-October.

Debt-ridden 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 disaster was attributed to human error by the pilots and air traffic control and was followed by allegations that nearly a third of the PIA pilot licenses were fake or dubious.

In Nov. last year, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) announced lifting the ban on PIA, while the UK removed Pakistan from its ‘Air Safety List’ on July 16, paving the way for Pakistani airlines to apply for permits to resume UK flights.

“Resumption of the flights to the UK is dependent on TCO (Third-Country Operator) authorization, which is expected by mid-September,” Hafeez said.

A TCO authorization is a safety certificate issued by the UK Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) to non-UK airlines, permitting them to operate commercial flights to, from, or within the UK.

The PIA spokesperson said services on the Lahore–Paris route are expected to resume again in Nov. this year when travel typically peaks, with Pakistani diaspora flying into the country during the Christmas holidays.

Arab News reached out to Pakistan’s Privatization Commission for comment on the impact of the PIA route suspension but received no response by the time of filing of this story.

PIA spokesperson Hafeez, however, said the privatization process “depends more on financial performance and annual revenue forecasts than on the status of individual routes.”

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.

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.


Authorities issue flood alert as Pakistan monsoon death toll nears 800

Authorities issue flood alert as Pakistan monsoon death toll nears 800
Updated 25 August 2025

Authorities issue flood alert as Pakistan monsoon death toll nears 800

Authorities issue flood alert as Pakistan monsoon death toll nears 800
  • Residents of low-lying areas asked to stay vigilant amid risk of high flooding in Chenab, Ravi and Sutlej
  • The ongoing monsoon season, expected to last until Sept. 10, has raised fears of a repeat of 2022 deluges

ISLAMABAD: Disaster authorities on Monday issued a fresh alert of flooding in rivers and streams as well as urban floods in multiple cities in Pakistan’s most populous Punjab province as the nationwide monsoon death toll hit almost 800.

There is a risk of high to very high flooding in the Chenab, Ravi and Sutlej rivers in the next 48 hours, according to the Punjab Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA).

Urban flooding is expected in Rawalpindi, Lahore and Gujranwala divisions, while flash floods are likely in the northern and northeastern districts of the province, with alerts issued to local administrations.

“Deploy rescue teams in advance at sensitive locations to deal with the emergency situation,” PDMA Director-General Irfan Ali Kathia said in alerts sent to commissioners and deputy commissioners of at-risk areas.

“In case of heavy rain, inform the citizens in advance. Announcements should be made in mosques and instructions should be issued to the citizens at the local level to stay in safe places.”

Medium to high flows have also been expected in nullahs originating from the Pir Panjal Range, particularly Bein, Basantar and Deg, with low to medium flooding likely at Jassar in the next 24 hours.

Pakistan has so far reported 799 deaths in incidents relating to rains, floods and landslides since late June, according to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA). The most devastating spell of the monsoon began on August 15 and has killed at least 485 people in just 10 days.

The NDMA earlier asked residents of low-lying and flood-prone areas to remain alert, avoid unnecessary travel near riverbanks and strictly follow official flood warnings. It advised communities to prepare emergency kits with food, water and medical supplies for up to five days, secure valuables and livestock, and avoid crossing causeways, low bridges and flooded roads.

The Punjab PDMA has said the province is experiencing its eighth monsoon spell, which is likely to last until August 27. Heavy rains have been forecast in the next 24 hours across most districts, with upper Punjab, including Murree, Rawalpindi, Attock, Jhelum and Chakwal, likely to receive the heaviest downpours.

Annual monsoon rains are crucial for Pakistan’s agriculture and water supply but in recent years have also unleashed devastation, intensified by shifting climate patterns.

Authorities say the ongoing monsoon season is expected to last until at least September 10 and the NDMA has warned the rains could rival the scale of the catastrophic floods of June 2022, which killed more than 1,700 people and caused over $30 billion in damage, according to government estimates.

Experts warn that without urgent adaptation and mitigation measures, the human and economic toll of climate change in Pakistan will only deepen in the years ahead.


Pakistan unveils seven-point plan for Gaza peace at OIC foreign ministers’ summit

Pakistan unveils seven-point plan for Gaza peace at OIC foreign ministers’ summit
Updated 25 August 2025

Pakistan unveils seven-point plan for Gaza peace at OIC foreign ministers’ summit

Pakistan unveils seven-point plan for Gaza peace at OIC foreign ministers’ summit
  • Islamabad urges immediate ceasefire, humanitarian access, UNRWA support, Gaza reconstruction
  • Pakistan condemns Israel’s “Greater Israel” plan as a threat to regional peace and Arab sovereignty

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar on Sunday presented a seven-point plan before the OIC to end Israel’s war in Gaza and achieve lasting peace in Palestine, urging Muslim countries to take “concrete measures” rather than issue statements of sympathy.

Dar was speaking at the 21st Extraordinary Session of the OIC Council of Foreign Ministers, being held from Aug. 25-26, against the backdrop of Israel intensifying its military operations in Gaza. Earlier this month, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s security cabinet approved a plan for the territory’s full military occupation, a move that has drawn international condemnation and warnings it would worsen an already catastrophic humanitarian crisis.

Addressing the gathering, Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar accused Israel of “systematic, premeditated and deliberate” violations of international law, highlighting that over 60,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, had been killed since Oct. 7, 2023, when Israel launched its onslaught. He described attacks on hospitals, schools, UN facilities, aid convoys and refugee camps as “wanton acts of collective punishment in full world view.”

Dar said the Palestinian question was a “litmus test” for the credibility of the global “rules-based order” and laid out seven steps that Pakistan to end the violence and achieve peace.

“First, an immediate, permanent and unconditional ceasefire across Gaza and the Occupied Palestinian Territory, with full implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 2735,” Dar said. 

“Second, unfettered, sustained and secure humanitarian access to all civilians in need, and the protection of aid workers, medical teams and the UN personnel. Pakistan has continued a steady dispatch of humanitarian goods for our brothers and sisters in Gaza.”

Pakistan’s third step called for “renewed and reinforced international support to UNRWA, which remains indispensable to the survival of millions of Palestinians.” The fourth step was an end to forced displacement, settlement expansion and annexation of Palestinian land, particularly in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. 

Dar warned that “Israel’s declared intent to occupy Gaza city would be a deliberate attempt to obliterate Palestinian existence and heritage. It must be firmly opposed.”

Dar added that the plan also called for the implementation of an Arab and OIC-led reconstruction program for Gaza, the revival of a time-bound political process for a two-state solution and accountability for war crimes and crimes against humanity.

He warned against “the brazen audacity of the so-called Israeli cabinet in unveiling its ominous plan to extend Israel’s full military control over Gaza as well as the Israeli prime minister’s recent allusion to the creation of a ‘Greater Israel,’” saying it revealed Israel’s “annexationist and rogue mindset.”

“We joined the statement issued by the Arab-Islamic Ministerial Committee, along with other countries, in expressing strong condemnation and categorical rejection of the Israeli announcement, denouncing it as an unacceptable escalation and a brazen attempt to entrench illegal occupation by coercion,” the Pakistani deputy PM said.

Calling the crisis “a defining moment for the Muslim Ummah,” he added: 

“History will not judge us by our words but by our actions. The Palestinian people do not seek statements of sympathy; they need concrete measures to end their suffering and secure their liberation from Israeli occupation. The OIC must rise to this challenge with unity, resolve, and purpose.”