AFP/ PTI

Pakistan validates most licenses of pilots working abroad

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Islamabad:  Pakistan’s government has validated most of the licenses it issued to pilots working abroad, but more than 200 others accused of obtaining tainted licenses were still being investigated, an aviation spokesman said Friday, in a move aimed at addressing the concerns of global airlines.

In a statement, Abdul Sattar Khokar, spokesman for Pakistan’s Civil Aviation Authority, said the licenses of 166 of 176 Pakistani pilots working in the United Arab Emirates, Turkey, Malaysia, Vietnam, Bahrain, Ethiopia, Hong Kong, Oman, Qatar and Kuwait were “validated as genuine and certified” and “having no anomaly.”

The verification process for the licenses of the remaining 10 pilots will be concluded by next week, Khokar said. He said the agency informed airlines from the 10 countries about the pilots’ qualifications at their request.

The credibility of Pakistan’s civil aviation authority and reputation of the country’s pilots have been at stake since June.

That’s when aviation minister Ghulam Sarwar Khan, in a speech to Parliament, stunned the nation and shocked many airlines around the globe by announcing that Pakistan had grounded nearly a third of the pilots working for state-run Pakistan International Airlines because they cheated on their pilot’s exams.

The revelation prompted the European Union’s aviation safety agency to halt Pakistan’s national airline from flying into Europe for six months. It also forced some countries to ground Pakistani pilots working for their airlines.

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