Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Karachi Area Control Centre (Urdu: کراچی ہوائی مرکز اختیار) is one of two Area Control Centers in Pakistan operated by the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority and is based in Terminal 1 at Jinnah International Airport in Karachi. [1] Karachi ACC air traffic controllers provide en route and terminal control services to aircraft ...
The PIA maintenance also check other airlines' aircraft in Karachi such as Philippine Airlines, Yemenia and Turkish Airlines. In 2007 a Karachi bound 747 for the UK was found by government inspectors to have poor maintenance at Karachi and Islamabad after an engine fell onto a Manchester Airport runway shortly after landing. [16]
The investigation was the preliminary report into the PIA 8303 plane crash that killed 97 people in the southern city of Karachi on 22 May. [ 17 ] On 30 June, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) revoked PIA's 'third part authorisation', subsequently banning PIA from flying in European airspace for 6 months from the following day ...
Air Arabia: Ras Al Khaimah: Airblue: Abu Dhabi, Dubai–International, Jeddah, Karachi, Riyadh, Sharjah, Skardu (Begins 30 March 2025) [14] AirSial: Dammam, Jeddah, [15] Karachi, Muscat: Azerbaijan Airlines: Baku [16] Batik Air Malaysia: Kuala Lumpur–International: Cham Wings Airlines: Damascus [17] China Southern Airlines: Guangzhou [18 ...
Air pollution in Karachi reaches annual mean of 88 PM2.5 and 290 PM10, much higher than recommended. [57] 2010s. 2010 Karachi Literature Festival begins. [58]
Independent Air Flight 1851 crashed 8 February 1989 on approach to Santa Maria Airport in the Azores, due to pilot and air traffic control errors. All 144 on board died. All 144 on board died. Martinair Flight 495 crashed on landing at Faro Airport 21 December 1992 after flying through two microbursts . 56 people on board were killed.
The aircraft involved was an Airbus A320-214, [23] built by Airbus Industrie in 2004, with registration AP-BLD and MSN 2274, and owned by GE Capital Aviation Services (GECAS). [24] [8] The plane was powered by two CFM International CFM56-5B4/P engines, [25] [24] which were most recently installed in February and May 2019. [18]
On 8 June 2014, 10 militants armed with automatic weapons, a rocket launcher, suicide vests, and grenades attacked Jinnah International Airport in Karachi, Pakistan.Thirty-six people were killed, including all 10 attackers, and 18 others were wounded. [2]