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No world govt runs airline, says Miftah as Punjab, KP eye PIA acquisition

Former finance minister claims tough PIA privatisation "pre-requisitions" discouraging buyers

ISLAMABAD: Reacting to the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab governments’ interest in acquiring Pakistan International Airline (PIA), former finance minister Miftah Ismail said there were no state-run airlines anywhere around the globe.

“No government in the world operates airlines,” Miftah said as he came down hard on provincial governmentsā€™ proposals to buy the national carrier while speaking at Geo News programme ā€˜Naya Pakistanā€™.

The federal governmentā€™s latest attempt to privatise its struggling national airline fell flat after the sole bidder, Blue World City, offered just Rs10 billion for a 60% stake in PIA against the minimum asking price of Rs85 billion ā€” flatly refusing further negotiations.

This bid failure marks Pakistanā€™s second attempt in a decade to divest the national flag carrier, with a similar effort ending prematurely in 2015, reported The News.

Following the fiasco, the KP government ā€” in a bid to retain the PIA within the national fold ā€” expressed its ā€œearnest interestā€ in participating in the bidding process for the sale of the national flag carrier.

In a letter to Privatisation Minister Abdul Aleem Khan on Friday, the KPā€™s Board of Investment and Trade (BOIT) they were prepared to offer a bid that will surpass the current highest offer of Rs10 billion.

Later, following the KP suit, the Maryam Nawaz-led Punjab government also expressed interest in acquiring the national carrier.

Taking to PML-N supporters in New York, former prime minister Nawaz Sharif said that his daughter Minister urged him to purchase the PIA and rebrand it as ā€œAir Punjabā€.

Commenting on these developments, Miftah said that he didnā€™t know any province had an airline.

ā€œA province’s responsibility is to provide education, health and convenience to the people,ā€ he said regretting that the provinces ā€œdo not collect a penny of tax but seek financial assistance from the Centre”.

Responding to a question regarding the PIA privatisation fiasco, the former finance minister claimed that it came with ā€œsuch pre-requisitionsā€ which discouraged buyers.

He further noted that four ā€œinterestedā€ groups wanted to participate in the bidding process of the national carrier.

The collapse of PIAā€™s privatisation comes as Pakistan faces mounting pressure from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to reform its fiscal policies.

Under an IMF loan programme, Pakistan committed to divesting loss-making state-owned enterprises like PIA to help stabilise its economy.

Despite IMF expectations for PIAā€™s sale to be finalised by September, the government delayed the auction deadline multiple times ā€” from August 14 to October 1, then to October 31 ā€” reflecting low investor interest.

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