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After Fake Pilot License Scandal, Pakistan International Airlines Hit With A Flight Ticketing Scam Totalling Millions

IANS

Jun 30, 2020, 01:55 PM | Updated 01:58 PM IST


A Pakistan International Airlines plane (Pic Via Wikipedia)
A Pakistan International Airlines plane (Pic Via Wikipedia)

After dubious licenses scandal involving pilots, another scam hit the Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) with its officials making about 8 million PKR in the sale of tickets for special flights to Europe.

Sources told Dawn news on Monday (29 June) that some officials at the Sialkot PIA office accommodated some 50 old ticket holders for their travel to Italy and Paris on special flights in violation of rules to mint money.

As per policy, the PIA has not been accommodating passengers having tickets issued prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, (since mid-March) for any destination.

For special flights, the PIA is issuing new tickets which are almost double the price of the fare charged for regular flights issued prior to the pandemic.

"The officials in question accommodated old purchased tickets by charging extra money from their holders (passengers) for their travel to Italy and Paris," a source told Dawn news, adding the officials committed this fraud in collaboration with some travel agents.

"Through this fraud the officials also deprived the PIA of a huge sum of money," he said and added that the fraud had been detected and an inquiry launched against those involved.

Those availing the special repatriation flights to Pakistan have earlier expressed their concern on inadequate arrangements to acquire tickets, costly fares and non-refundable tickets in case of any mishap.

Earlier, the federal government had asked the National Database and Registration Authority (Nadra) to book tickets, instead of PIA, for those repatriated from the US.

Meanwhile, the family of one of the 97 victims of the PIA crash on May 22 has urged the Supreme Court to take action against the "mafia'' that it claimed has ruined the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) and the national flag carrier, and demanded early release of the insurance amount as per the carriage act law.

"There has been a series of fatal accidents in the past and nothing has changed as we have not learned a lesson from these accidents. We request the Supreme Court chief justice to take action against those who ruined the CAA and the airline industry in the country," Danish Awan, whose mother died in the crash, told Dawn news on Monday.

He said financial compensation (insurance) should be provided immediately to the affected families as per the carriage act law.

(This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text. Only the headline has been changed.)


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