The move comes after a government report found pilots largely to blame for May 22 crash in Karachi that killed 98 people.
Pakistan International Airlines said Thursday it had grounded almost a third of its pilots for holding fake or dubious licences, a month after one of its planes crashed into houses killing 98 people. The move comes after the government released a preliminary report into the May 22 crash in Karachi.
Investigators largely blamed the two pilots, who ignored flight protocols and had been discussing the coronavirus outbreak when they first attempted to land the Airbus A320.
PIA spokesman Abdullah Hafeez Khan told AFP that a government probe last year had found about 150 of its 434 pilots were carrying « either bogus or suspicious licences ».
« We have decided to ground those 150 pilots with bogus licences with immediate effect, » he said.
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USA — mix Pakistan International Airlines grounds 150 pilots over "bogus" licenses after deadly crash