Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 20th January 2026, 11:40 PM
Diplomatic relations between the nuclear-armed neighbours have reached a fresh nadir as Pakistan officially extended its ban on Indian-registered aircraft. The Pakistan Airports Authority (PAA) announced on Tuesday, 20 January 2026, that the restrictive measures—initially imposed following a surge in cross-border tensions—will now remain in force until at least 05:00 PKT on 24 February 2026.
The current aviation blockade is the direct result of a deteriorating security situation in the region. Tensions escalated sharply following a major militant attack in Pahalgam, located in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir. In the diplomatic fallout that ensued, New Delhi took the significant step of suspending the historic Indus Waters Treaty, a move Islamabad viewed as a direct provocation regarding its water security.
In a tit-for-tat response to the water treaty suspension, Pakistan closed its sovereign airspace to Indian carriers nine months ago. India subsequently reciprocated on 30 April by barring Pakistani aircraft from its own skies, effectively creating a “digital curtain” over the subcontinent’s flight paths.
| Period / Conflict | Airspace Status | Contextual Trigger |
|---|---|---|
| 1999 | Suspended | The Kargil War |
| 2019 | Suspended | Post-Pulwama/Balakot Crisis |
| April 2025 | Closed | Pahalgam attack and Water Treaty suspension |
| Jan 2026 | Extended | Prolonged diplomatic deadlock |
| Feb 2026 | Review Date | Current expiry set for 24 February |
The Pakistan Airports Authority has clarified that the prohibition is comprehensive. It applies to all aircraft that are owned, operated, or leased by Indian entities. This blanket ban encompasses:
Commercial passenger airliners.
Private charter vessels.
Military and state-owned transport aircraft.
Freight and cargo carriers.
The decision to extend the ban ensures that the existing closure, which has disrupted regional travel and forced international long-haul flights to take fuel-heavy detours, will continue for another month.
Aviation analysts note that such closures impose a heavy financial burden on airlines. Indian carriers flying toward Europe, the Middle East, and North America are forced to fly south over the Arabian Sea or through central Asian corridors, significantly increasing flight durations and fuel consumption. Similarly, the PAA faces a loss in overflight fees, which are typically a stable source of foreign currency revenue for the authority.
Historically, this pattern of “airspace diplomacy” has been a hallmark of the bilateral relationship during periods of crisis. Similar closures were observed during the 1999 Kargil conflict and following the 2019 Pulwama incident. With neither side showing a willingness to return to the negotiating table over the Pahalgam incident or the Indus Waters Treaty, the regional aviation sector remains in a state of expensive uncertainty.
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