Against this background it would be more than a welcome change for the national carrier to enforce a Lahore High Court-recommended quota for women following a petition filed by a female pilot. Through a ruling issued on Thursday, the court said it would like PIA to reserve a 10 per cent quota for women cadet pilots. The petition was filed after the sole woman candidate for the job of cadet pilot saw her chances vanish into thin air when the airline suddenly reduced by half the number of cadet pilots it wished to employ under an open merit policy. Since the recruitment process prescribed a 10 per cent women’s quota the court was convinced that anything less would be a breach of Article 27 of the Constitution.
This may be a sensible approach but it fails to address a perennial issue for the airline industry: there are just too few women pilots out there — not only in Pakistan but also in the rest of the world. In North America, for instance, women make up just 5 per cent of a vast pool of pilots.
While it may be entirely possible to implement a quota for women cadet pilots in PIA, it would be much harder to enforce one for more experienced women pilots in the local airline industry. This has a lot to do with the unappealing circumstances surrounding a flying career.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 7th, 2018.
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