HomeWorldFrom blacklist to boarding: Why UK banned Pakistani flights in 2020 and why it’s allowing them again now

From blacklist to boarding: Why UK banned Pakistani flights in 2020 and why it’s allowing them again now

The British decision comes months after European regulators also ended a four-year suspension on PIA, allowing the airline to resume flights to the continent in January.

July 16, 2025 / 16:19 IST
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File photo of  a Taliban fighter standing guard as a Pakistan International Airlines plane, the first commercial international flight to land since the Taliban retook power last month, takes off with passengers onboard at the airport in Kabul on September 13, 2021. (Image used for representation purpose)
File photo of a Taliban fighter standing guard as a Pakistan International Airlines plane, the first commercial international flight to land since the Taliban retook power last month, takes off with passengers onboard at the airport in Kabul on September 13, 2021. (Image used for representation purpose)

More than five years after grounding Pakistani carriers over serious safety concerns, Britain has lifted its ban on airlines from the country, a move confirmed on Wednesday by the UK embassy in Islamabad. But the decision follows years of international scrutiny and a string of aviation embarrassments for Pakistan.

The ban was first imposed in June 2020 following the deadly crash of a Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) jet in Karachi, which killed nearly 100 people. The aircraft plummeted into a residential area shortly before landing - a tragedy attributed to gross human error by both the pilots and air traffic control.

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In the aftermath of the crash, Pakistan’s entire aviation sector came under global fire after the country’s aviation minister admitted in parliament that about one-third of Pakistani pilots held “fake or dubious” licenses. The shocking revelation prompted aviation watchdogs across the world to act. European and British authorities swiftly barred Pakistan’s flag carrier, and later other airlines, from their airspace, citing safety risks.

The UK Air Safety Committee, part of the country’s independent aviation safety framework, maintained the ban for years as Pakistan struggled to restore credibility. But on Wednesday, the British High Commission in Islamabad said the UK had finally decided to lift the ban, claiming that Pakistan had made sufficient progress in aviation safety standards.