KARACHI: Days after it resumed flights to Europe after a four year gap, Pakistan’s flag carrier apologised for
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
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’s national airline apologised on Friday for an advert of the plane flying at the Eiffel tower. The image posted by the state-owned Pakistan International Airlines to social media was a sight to vision as it showed a plane aimed
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
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s national airline said on Thursday (Jan 16) that an advertisement showing a plane heading toward the Eiffel Tower was never intended to evoke the memories of the Sep 11 attacks. The illustration,
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..
Posted on PIA's official X account (formerly Twitter) on 10 January, the post featured an image of an aircraft heading towards the Eiffel Tower against a backdrop of the French flag. The caption read: "Paris,
The World’s Happiest Workplaces 2025 list, published on Tuesday, recognized Nestlé, Unilever, and Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) as some of the
PIA spokesman Abdullah Hafeez said Thursday that the ad, which hasn't been deleted and has more than 21.2 million views, was only ever meant to celebrate that the airline was resuming flights to Europe, and never intended to harm 9/11 survivors or victims' families.
Pakistan national airline draws criticism over ad published to mark first flight to Paris after safety ban lifted
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.