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Remarkable thing is that this 70+ year old businessman with no background in airline industry has so much ideas and knowledge at his finger tips. He speaks cautiously and compassionately even about those leeching employees milking the PIA.
In business, the quality of a true leader is not knowing everything but surrounding himself with those who do.
There was no sense in carrying this enterprise forward any longer. It should have been dumped over a decade ago.
No government can expect to make money out of selling PIA, not when the company has over Rs650bn of accumulated losses on its books. You can either shut the company down altogether, and still be left with all that debt to service and repay, because it was guaranteed by the government. Or you can try and salvage the airline by asking a private investor to take its intangible assets and bid over how much they can commit to invest in it to try and rebuild the airline anew. That’s the path the government opted to take, and it worked.
By now, I have seen both sides of the arguments: For or against the privatization of PIA and not just in this forum. The against are mostly politically driven and it is always good to have the Opposition challenging the govt, especially on domestic issues. But I have concluded that PIA is really going to take off after this privatization and, as I said above, we can have this discussion again in December 2026 and then again in December 2030 compare 'before and after'. There won't be a denying the facts by 2030.
Speaking of the 'against' voices, there are some apparently neutral economist who have spoken against the privitization and their arguments, too, where sound but what they missed was this: If, under the govt owned PIA could be turned around then why has it not for the last several decades despite many attempts? The answer is not hard to guess: No govt had the backbone for the political storms to face. But this time the military's 'Danda' is enforcing the decisions and once the private companies are in the commanding seat, the govt's political hobbling would be neutralized.
Right.
Recently saw a political analyst in Pakistan telling a story about UK's Margarete Thatcher: Upon her success in turning things around for the UK, some reporters told her that she herself should not be particularly credited for the turnaround and that it were her advisors who did the job. She replied, Yes, but who chose those advisors?
[Not want to go into the politics but the context was how Imran Khan had surrounded himself with subpar team members while he was the PM of Pakistan].
pia wants partnership with other international airline. can any body care to explain why they want it ,whats the concept anfle how it works. just curious

But but but Fauji foundation is private sector.
UAE to acquire stack in Fauji to settle 1 billion of the 3 billion debt on government of Pakistan.
@Jango
Ab to respond karnay ka dil bhi nhn karta. If someone chooses to be so ignorant and belligerent, or take everyone else for a fool, just smile and wave.
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