Funny Thread

Pakistan airlines takes 7 Passengers standing on Aisle

By Aanavandi

February 26, 2017

On 20 January a Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) with the capacity of 409 passengers, forced seven passengers to stand during travel.

The incident is criticized as breach of safety regulations, as the passengers were standing on a four-hour flight from Karachi to Madinah on January 20.

According to the Express Tribune, the passengers were boarded on an overbooked PK-743 flight.

said.

Details of the flight have only emerged now because of extensive investigations by Dawn newspaper.

Staff had issued additional handwritten boarding passes, the paper reported.

Such an over-crowded flight would have caused problems in an emergency evacuation, aviation experts said, and passengers would not have had access to oxygen if it was suddenly required.

This is the first time the airline is known to have boarded excess passengers on a flight.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kNOr0iiUOoo

The flight in question went from Karachi to Medina carrying a total of 416 passengers, on a Boeing 777 with a total seating capacity of 409, including staff seats.

Dawn accuses Pakistan’s Civil Aviation Authority of “not taken punitive action against the airline or its staffers for putting the passengers’ lives at risk”.

The newspaper quoting airline sources accuses PIA ground traffic staff of issuing handwritten – rather than computer-generated – boarding passes to the extra passengers.

It quotes flight captain Anwer Adil as insisting that he was not told about the extra passengers until after take-off.

“I … noticed [that] some people were those who were categorically refused jump [staff] seats by me at the check-in counter before the flight”, he was quoted by Dawn as saying.

“I had already taken off and the senior purser did not inform me about extra passengers before closing the aircraft door.

“Therefore after take-off [any] immediate landing back at Karachi was not possible as it required a lot of fuel dumping which was not in the interest of the airline.”

PIA spokesman Danyal Gilani told the BBC that “the matter is under investigation and appropriate action will be taken once responsibility is fixed”.

When asked how long the inquiry will take, he said it was “not possible to put a time frame on it”.