KARACHI: A Pakistani man who was mistakenly flown to șŁœÇֱȄ earlier this week has issued a legal notice to Air Sial, seeking compensation for âgross negligence,â his lawyer said on Saturday.
Malik Shahzain Ahmed, a resident of Karachi, was scheduled to fly from Lahore to Karachi on July 8 on the private airlineâs flight PF-146. However, he boarded an international flight to Jeddah without any visa or passport and was subsequently detained and deported by Saudi immigration authorities.
A legal notice sent by Ahmedâs counsel to Air Sialâs chief executive reads the airlineâs âgross dereliction of duty, reckless conduct and operational failureâ had led to the wrongful boarding of his client on the international flight.
âWe have served the airline a notice, and if they fail to compensate my client, we will file a petition,â Advocate Muhammad Nawaz Dahri told Arab News.
The legal notice says Ahmed was denied assistance by the airline and subjected to humiliation, distress. He also faced severe mental trauma and had to purchase another ticket to return to Karachi.
The notice accuses the airline of violating the Sindh Consumer Protection Act, 2014, citing âdefectiveâ service, lack of identity verification and âmisleading representations regarding safety and professionalism.â
It also alleges breaches of Pakistanâs Civil Aviation Rules, 1994, the Pakistan Immigration Ordinance, 1979, and international air travel conventions, including the Montreal Convention of 1999.
âYour airlineâs failure to perform this basic due diligence endangered passenger security and violated air travel norms,â the notice added.
In a statement on Friday, the Pakistan Airport Authority said it had taken notice of the lapse and written letters to the civil aviation regulator and the station manager.
âIn the letter, the civil aviation regulator has been requested to impose a heavy fine on the airline that is guilty of negligence,â PAA spokesman Saifullah, who goes by a single name, told Arab News.
In a video clip circulating online, Ahmed said he went to Lahore airport to board the Karachi-bound flight on July 8 but âmistakenlyâ sat in the Jeddah-bound flight after collecting his boarding pass.
âAfter two hours, I asked [myself], âThis plane doesnât seem to be landing,ââ he said. âThen I got to know that I had boarded the wrong plane.â
The legal notice demands a written response within two days alongside compensatory damages.
It warns of legal proceedings if the airline fails to comply, including a constitutional petition and complaints to Pakistanâs aviation and human rights authorities.
Air Sial is yet to comment publicly on the matter.