LONDON: The European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) has advised airlines not to fly below FL 260 altitude while flying over Lahore and Karachi due to the “current security situation in Pakistan with the presence of violent non-state actor groups with confirmed anti-aviation weaponry, possibly MANPADS (man-portable air-defence systems)”.
EASA’s advisory is non-binding and airlines are not required to follow the advice. EASA said in its latest advisory note that “there is a continued possible threat to civil aviation resulting in a high risk to operation at altitudes below FL 260”.
It said: “Additionally, Kashmir region remains the site of territorial dispute with sporadic military operations posing a potential inadvertent risk to civil aviation due to a potential risk for misidentification in case of military escalation, particularly in the FIR Lahore (OPLR).”
EASA has advised air operators to take this information and any other relevant information into account in their own risk assessments, alongside any available guidance or directions from their national authority as appropriate.
EASA makes references to similar advisories issued for French and German air operators issued over the last year. The agency had also issued a similar advisory in November last year, recommending all operators to exercise extreme caution” when flying over the country and not to fly below 24,000 feet (7,300 metres). –Agencies