A spokesperson for PIA said the ad, which has more than 21.2 million views on X, was only ever meant to celebrate that the airline was resuming flights to Europe. View on euronews
Pakistan International Airlines on Friday issued an apology over a controversial post on its official X handle, celebrating the resumption of Europe flights after a four-year
After a long-awaited resumption of Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) flights to Europe, the national flag carrier took to the skies of Europe once again, with its first flight to Paris touching down at Charles de Gaulle Airport on Friday.
Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) is getting a bumpy ride over a promotional graphic that appears to evoke a terror attack on Paris.
According to PIA, the airline will operate two direct flights to Paris on a weekly basis.
ISLAMABAD: The first direct flight from Islamabad to Paris took off on Friday as the Pakistan International Airlines resumed its long-awaited flights to Europe in more than four years, marking
KARACHI: Days after it resumed flights to Europe after a four year gap, Pakistan’s flag carrier apologised for
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has ordered an inquiry into a controversial social media post by Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) that celebrated the resumption of flights to Europe after a four-year hiatus.
Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) has resumed flights to Europe after a 4.5-year ban. The first flight, PK749, departed from Islamabad to Paris, marking a milestone for the national carrier. The resumption is expected to benefit overseas Pakistanis and restore PIA’s reputation globally.
Pakistan's embattled national airline apologised on Friday for an ad of a plane flying at the Eiffel Tower, published to mark the first flight to Paris aft..
The total collective reach of this ad alone is 30 million now with 755,000 reactions out of which only 10pc were negative," spokesperson says.
Pakistan national airline draws criticism over ad published to mark first flight to Paris after safety ban lifted