City
Epaper

Pakistan loses over ₹1,240 crore after airspace ban on Indian flights

By ANI | Updated: August 10, 2025 07:24 IST

Islamabad [Pakistan], August 10 : Pakistan has suffered massive financial losses after shutting its airspace to Indian-registered aircraft, with ...

Open in App

Islamabad [Pakistan], August 10 : Pakistan has suffered massive financial losses after shutting its airspace to Indian-registered aircraft, with the Pakistan Airports Authority (PAA) losing over Rs 1,240 crore (PKR 4.1 billion) in just over two months, according to a statement by its Ministry of Defence in the National Assembly on Friday, Dawn reported.

According to Dawn, the closure, which Islamabad claimed was in retaliation to India's suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty on April 23, came into effect from April 24, when Pakistan withdrew overflight permission for all Indian-registered aircraft and those operated, owned, or leased by Indian carriers.

The move, however, backfired economically. The PAA's revenue from overflying charges plunged between April 24 and June 30, nearly affecting 100-150 Indian aircraft daily and slashing Pakistan's transit air traffic by almost 20 per cent, as per Dawn.

The Pakistani defence ministry admitted the financial setback but tried to justify it by saying, "Sovereignty and national defence take precedence over economic considerations." Officials also claimed such measures were issued via Notices to Airmen (NOTAMs) for "strategic and diplomatic" reasons.

According to the ministry's own data, PAA's average daily overflight revenue in 2019 was $508,000, compared to $760,000 in 2025, meaning the ban is costing Pakistan far more now than during the previous standoff, Dawn reported.

Currently, Pakistan's airspace remains open to all except Indian airlines and aircraft, with the ban extended twice and now set to last until the last week of August.

Indian carriers continue unaffected on other international routes, while Pakistani airlines are still barred from entering Indian airspace.

The airspace standoff began after the April 22 Pakistan-sponsored terror attack in Pahalgam, Jammu & Kashmir, which killed 26 people. In response, India banned all Pakistani-operated, owned or leased aircraft, including military flights, from entering Indian skies from April 30.

Minister of State for Civil Aviation Murlidhar Mohol said the NOTAM restricting Pakistani aircraft from entering Indian airspace has been extended till August 23, 2025, citing "prevailing security protocols and strategic considerations."

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalMamata Banerjee claims EC denied her permission for public meeting in Collin Lane area

InternationalUS-Iran conflict: Trump extends ceasefire to allow Iran more time to come up with "unified proposal"

InternationalUS sanctions target Iranian weapons and UAV procurement networks

Politics"Give complaint if found": Senthil Balaji dismisses cash distribution allegations, says DMK will sweep Coimbatore

National"Congress have always made such low-level comments...": Union Minister Piyush Goyal criticises Kharge's "terrorist" remark on PM Modi

International Realted Stories

International'Time for us to make an impact with our exports into India': Trinidad and Tobago envoy

InternationalDefence Minister Rajnath Singh calls for enhanced India-Germany defence industrial partnerships in Berlin

InternationalUS-Iran conflict: JD Vance's Pakistan trip for second round of talks put on hold

InternationalCDS General Chauhan meets UK's Defence industry leaders to boost bilateral defence collaboration

InternationalAfghanistan's Nooristan faces sever food shortages, 136,000 people at risk: ICRC