Initial probe suggests aircraft fire may have been deliberate

Published January 29, 2020
Initially, it was reported that a fire broke out in the bushes near a desolated portion of the airport which spread and engulfed the grounded Boeing 737 of the now-defunct Shaheen Airlines International (SAI). Fire tenders were dispatched to the area which managed to put out the fire.  — Wikimedia Commons/File
Initially, it was reported that a fire broke out in the bushes near a desolated portion of the airport which spread and engulfed the grounded Boeing 737 of the now-defunct Shaheen Airlines International (SAI). Fire tenders were dispatched to the area which managed to put out the fire. — Wikimedia Commons/File

KARACHI: Investigators probing the fire that engulfed a grounded aircraft of a private carrier at Karachi airport on Sunday night believed that the plane was intentionally set on fire, it emerged on Tuesday.

Initially, it was reported that a fire broke out in the bushes near a desolated portion of the airport which spread and engulfed the grounded Boeing 737 of the now-defunct Shaheen Airlines International (SAI). Fire tenders were dispatched to the area which managed to put out the fire.

On Monday, authorities visited the site of the fire, which was far from the runway and where a number of grounded and retired aircraft have been parked for the past couple of years, and found that the fire did not erupt in the bushes but in the aircraft, which was destroyed badly.

Later in the day, the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) formed a six-member fact-finding committee to probe the cause — whether it was an accident or arson — as well as to “ascertain the quantum of damages occurred as the result of the fire”.

The CAA said that on Jan 26 at 10:44pm “an incident of fire took place between inner and outer perimeter fence east side of international satellite on barren land near to a location where 12 disabled/junk aircraft of ex-Shaheen Airline International are parked”.

The probe committee, headed by Engineer Taufiq Shaikh of the CAA, has been tasked to submit its report by Jan 30; however, sources told Dawn that initial probe clearly suggested that someone had set the aircraft on fire.

“It is our initial assessment [that the fire started in the aircraft], but what worries us is how could someone enter the highly guarded location and [initially or unintentionally] cause the fire,” said a senior CAA official, on the condition of anonymity.

He, however, said that nothing was conclusive as yet and an investigation into the incident was under way.

The domestic and international operations of SAI were suspended by the CAA in October 2018 owing to non-payment of Rs1.36 billion dues. The CAA had taken possession of SAI planes and grounded them for what they called their poor condition.

Published in Dawn, January 29th, 2020

Opinion

Editorial

A costly cut
Updated 22 Jun, 2026

A costly cut

PAKISTAN is confronting a growing climate threat at precisely the moment it has reduced spending on the institutions...
Guarded access
22 Jun, 2026

Guarded access

ONE of the government’s ‘novel’ proposals to snag tax evaders has collided with some harsh realities. On...
Lyari’s passion
22 Jun, 2026

Lyari’s passion

THE love for football in Lyari knows no bounds. The World Cup might be underway thousands of miles away in North...
Unquiet Lebanon
Updated 21 Jun, 2026

Unquiet Lebanon

Either Israel must silence its guns and withdraw from all of Lebanon, or face isolation and boycott from the international community.
Mothers at risk
21 Jun, 2026

Mothers at risk

FOR years, efforts to reduce maternal deaths have focused heavily on postpartum haemorrhage — the severe bleeding...
Political budget
21 Jun, 2026

Political budget

THE KP budget does not read like a document of a province getting its fiscal house in order. Revenue is projected at...