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Oct 25, 2025

PIA reinstates Islamabad–Manchester flights, restoring direct UK–Pakistan link after five-year ban

PIA reinstates Islamabad–Manchester flights, restoring direct UK–Pakistan link after five-year ban
Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) touched down at Manchester Airport at 15:55 on 25 October, completing its first UK rotation since a safety-related ban grounded the flag-carrier in 2020. The inaugural Boeing 777 service left Islamabad with 284 passengers, including Pakistan’s aviation minister Khawaja Asif and senior airline officials, who were greeted on arrival by British High Commissioner Jane Marriott.

PIA’s return closes a difficult chapter that began after a Karachi A320 crash exposed widespread irregularities in pilot licensing. Both the UK Civil Aviation Authority and the European Union Aviation Safety Agency barred the carrier, costing PIA an estimated £115 million per year in lost revenue and severing a vital transport link for Britain’s 1.4 million-strong Pakistani diaspora. Intensive audits, a complete overhaul of licence verification, and fresh maintenance and safety protocols convinced regulators to restore operating permits this summer.

For now the airline will operate twice-weekly rotations on the Islamabad–Manchester sector, but it has secured slots at Birmingham and London with the intention of adding frequencies before Ramadan 2026. PIA says fares will start from about £633 return, under-cutting rivals by 18 % on average, and cargo holds will reopen a lucrative corridor for Britain’s £4.7 billion annual trade with Pakistan.

The restart is also a milestone in Islamabad’s IMF-mandated privatisation of the loss-making carrier. A profitable UK route strengthens the balance sheet just as five domestic bidders, including Airblue and Fauji Fertiliser, prepare final offers. Analysts warn, however, that PIA must maintain the tougher safety culture or risk immediate re-suspension under its new Foreign Aircraft Operating Permit, which includes quarterly compliance checks.

For corporate mobility teams the direct flight slashes journey times by four to six hours compared with Middle-East hub connections, while Manchester’s large South-Asian business community regains a non-stop option for project work in Pakistan’s twin technology corridors of Islamabad and Rawalpindi. Travel managers should note that refund and re-routing policies remain less generous than those of European network carriers and ensure travellers hold comprehensive insurance during PIA’s phased network build-up.
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