Pakistan Lost Rs 1,240 Crore In 2 Months After Closing Airspace To Indian Flights, Revenue Dropped As 150 Indian Flights Affected

New Delhi : Pakistan has suffered heavy 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 two months, Dawn reported. Pakistan Defence Minister Khawaja Mohammad Asif confirmed that due to the ban, which came into effect on April 24, the country had suffered a massive loss in overlying revenue.

As a result, PAA’s revenue from overflying charges dropped between April 24 and June 30, affecting 100-150 Indian aircraft daily and slashing Pakistan’s transit air traffic by almost 20 per cent, as per Dawn. Meanwhile, Pakistan has extended the closure of its airspace to Indian aircraft till August 24.

The ban will now remain in place until 4.59 am on August 24. Pakistani airspace not available for Indian-registered aircraft and aircraft operated, owned, or leased by Indian airlines/operators, including military flights, a NOTAM issued by the PPA read.

Indian carriers remain unaffected on other international routes, while Pakistani airlines are still barred from Indian airspace. The Civil Aviation Minister of State has confirmed that the NOTAM will remain in place until August 23, 2025.

The Pahalgam attack, which left 26 civilians dead, was claimed by The Resistance Front (TRF), an offshoot of the Pakistan-based terror group Lashkar-e-Taiba. In response, India launched multiple retaliatory measures, including Operation Sindoor, which targeted key terror infrastructure on Pakistan and Pakistan-Occupied-Kashmir (POK).

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