Sunday, February 26, 2017

IGNORANCE - Flight from Pakistan had seven passengers in aisle







IGNORANT SOCIETY LIVING IN 7TH CENTURY.
An investigation is under way after reports that a Pakistan International Airlines plane flew from Karachi to Saudi Arabia with people standing in the aisle all the way after staff boarded extra passengers.
People with handwritten boarding cards scrambled for seats as the Boeing 777 taxied for takeoff on 20 January, according to the report in Pakistani newspaper Dawn.
Although the plane was allowed to carry 409 passengers, there were 416 onboard flight PK743 to Medina, the report said. The official computerised list of passengers did not mention the extra travellers.
Carrying additional passengers on a plane is a serious breach of safety regulations. Those without seats would not have had oxygen masks and might have caused congestion if the aircraft had needed to be evacuated.
The flight’s captain, Anwar Adil, told Dawn he only learned about the extra passengers after takeoff, by which point it was too late to turn around as this would have meant dumping fuel in order to land safely.
“I had already left and the senior purser [cabin crew] did not point out extra passengers before closing the aircraft door. Therefore, after takeoff, immediate landing back in Karachi was not possible,” he said.
“It may be appreciated that immediate landing in Karachi after takeoff required a lot of fuel dumping, which was not in the interest of the airline.”
Danyal Gilani, a spokesman for PIA, told the BBC an internal investigation had begun “and appropriate action will be taken once responsibility is fixed”.
The national carrier was once a symbol of Pakistan’s engineering and aviation prowess, but suffers from huge debts, an ageing fleet and a string of corruption scandals.
PIA, which has losses of $3bn (£2.4bn), has been at the centre of a political row for years. Last year, Pakistan’s prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, had his attempts to privatise the airline blocked in parliament, leaving the government reluctantly in control.
Reports of mouldy food and in-flight entertainment not working on PIA flights are common. More seriously, in 2013, a PIA pilot was arrested in Leeds for attempting to fly a plane carrying more than 150 passengers while under the influence of alcohol.
Last December, a PIA flight crashed near Abbottabad, killing all 48 people onboard.

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