Islamabad airport goes to the UAE? Just the duty-free and lattes, not security

A quick exploration of what this could mean for your passport information

Image illustration: Tribune Creative

Imagine your visa to Dubai is suddenly rejected for security reasons, even though you have been going for years. It turns out that you used the Islamabad International Airport’s new wifi and clicked on a BBC story critical of Gulf migrant labour policies. This happened after Pakistan asked the UAE to bring in a firm to handle operations.

This is the fear that got me wondering about the possibility of something like this happening. I heard the news that Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar has made a government-to-government agreement to transfer Islamabad airport’s operational management with the UAE. “This partnership will help transform Islamabad airport into a facility that matches global service and operational standards,” Dar said.

The ministries of Finance, Defence, Law and Justice and Privatisation will prepare the agreement for the Civil Aviation Authority, according to government and aviation officials privy to the matter. This is part of a push to attract investment in the sector.

Islamabad’s airport may be Pakistan’s largest, newest and shiniest but it is struggling with inefficiencies. One reason was the decision to split the CAA and carve out a Pakistan Airport Authority in 2023. The idea was that the PAA would manage the airport’s business, Tahir Imran Mian told me.

“It is illogical for a regulator to also provide services on the ground,” he said. “The [US regulator] FAA isn’t busy running a Starbucks. Why should the CAA?” Outsourcing the airport's management will remedy these operational problems and allow the airport to turn a profit, he argued.

I figured there must be a reason for such an assumption. Some quick research indicated that the idea is not new. And while I would have liked to have an exact example to share, I do have something close.

Sialkot airport, it turns out, follows this model. Kind of. The CAA oversees it but the airport itself is managed by a private company: Sialkot International Airport Limited on a Build-Own-Operate basis. This is not the same as outsourcing but supporters say it proves that private ownership and management can work. In 2021, SIAL reported an after-tax profit of Rs224 million. The next year, it went up sixfold to Rs1.381 billion.

Running an airport

If you’ve been to Dubai airport, you’ve probably seen its fancy duty-free options: Paul’s Cafe at Terminal 3, Swarovski, Kiehl's, spa, sleep pods, Burberry, and Dyson. Running these business outlets and hotels comes under operational management, journalist Tahir Imran Mian explained.

Airports thus make money from duty-free shops, airlines, outlet rentals, parking spaces, air bridges, fuel facilities that companies pay to use, and ground handling companies.

This side of work has nothing to do with air traffic control, immigration, customs, communication systems, or security.

I was able to get in touch with a former CAA Chief Operating Officer, Obaidur Rehman Abbasi, who also confirmed that these operations would remain solely in Pakistani hands. Your passport information (personal data) is managed by the Federal Investigation Agency, and airlines only have access to passenger data. Third parties cannot gain access to this information, he added.

People on X and Facebook have taken this operational takeover to mean Pakistan is giving control of Islamabad airport to a foreign government, allowing it to tinker with its technological infrastructure.

Load Next Story