Pakistan’s economic reforms take a decisive turn as the Islamabad International Airport enters the privatization pipeline, just weeks after the UAE abandoned plans to take over its operations. The Express Tribune reports that Abu Dhabi’s reluctance to name an operating entity derailed what was once a promising outsourcing deal.
Tensions escalated when Pakistan demanded a firm commitment via a final call letter, met with UAE’s admission of inability to proceed. With that chapter closed, the government swiftly added the airport to its active privatization roster, mirroring the path of PIA’s recent handover to private control.
Behind the scenes, negotiations faltered over UAE insistence on bundling Islamabad with major airports in Karachi and Lahore under a G2G agreement—a proposal Islamabad firmly rebuffed. Privatization of bilateral air routes was another non-starter for Pakistan.
Earlier, the Privatization Division had pitched outsourcing all three airports to the Cabinet Committee on Privatization, but UAE’s pullback shifted focus to outright sales. A senior delegation’s Abu Dhabi visit aimed to iron out a framework deal, yet irreconcilable differences prevailed.
Chronic issues in Pakistan’s public sector—marked by weak accountability, political meddling, and mounting debts—have fueled this urgency. Experts note that state firms limp along until crises force bargain-basement privatizations, raising questions about long-term fiscal health.
For travelers and investors, this could herald modernized facilities and better services at Islamabad’s main hub, potentially transforming Pakistan’s aviation landscape amid ongoing economic pressures.
