K2 Airways cargo plane goes missing near Karachi with five crew

A K2 Airways cargo plane vanished over the Arabian Sea on the night of July 7, 2026, while on a routine flight from Sharjah to Karachi, with five crew members on board and no contact made since. The incident sent shockwaves through Pakistan’s aviation sector and triggered one of the largest air-sea search operations the country has seen in recent years.

What Happened to the K2 Airways Cargo Plane

The K2 Airways Boeing 737 cargo flight was en route from Sharjah to Karachi when, at 9:18 PM PST, it reported a navigational system issue and was promptly guided by the Karachi Area Control Centre.

At 9:21 PM PST, air traffic controllers observed the aircraft making a rapid descent with a sudden change in heading on radar. Shortly afterwards, both radar contact and communication with the aircraft were lost approximately 155 nautical miles west of Karachi.

Preliminary ADS-B data from flight trackers indicated a loss of altitude, followed by a brief climb, and then a second sudden and dramatic loss of altitude. The final received data point placed the aircraft at just 1,100 feet above mean sea level with a reported vertical rate of minus 22,400 feet per minute. In plain terms, the plane appeared to be falling at extreme speed before all signals stopped.

Aviation expert Imran Aslam told local media that it remained unclear what caused the aircraft to disappear from radar so quickly, noting that even with an engine failure a plane would normally continue to glide rather than plunge so suddenly.

Five Crew Members on Board the K2 Airways Cargo Plane

The airline confirmed that five crew members were on board the aircraft when contact was lost. The crew comprised Captain Mohammad Rizwan Idrees as pilot in command, Faisal Mehmood as first officer, Muhammad Toufique Khan as load master, and engineers Arif Siddiqui and Muhammad Hamid.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif expressed grief over the incident and conveyed his sympathies to the families of the five crew members aboard.

Search and Rescue Operation Under Way

Pakistan’s military and civilian authorities deployed multiple air and sea assets for the search and rescue operation. The Pakistan Navy frigate PNS Zulfiqar was quickly diverted to the area where contact with the aircraft was lost. The Pakistan Air Force also deployed aircraft for the effort, while a Pakistan Navy ATR aircraft took off from Turbat to assist.

The prime minister directed the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority, Pakistan Navy and Pakistan Air Force to expedite search and rescue operations in the Arabian Sea and employ all available resources.

An 11-member team from the Bureau of Safety Investigation probing the missing aircraft was also travelling from Islamabad to Karachi, with plans to travel from there to the site of the incident.

K2 Airways Office Sealed for Investigation

The Bureau of Safety Investigation team was also set to examine records at the airline’s offices as part of the probe. The K2 Airways office has been sealed, according to sources.

The airline, for its part, said it was fully cooperating with the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority and other government agencies. Sealing an office in cases like this is standard practice. It lets investigators preserve documents, maintenance logs, crew records and communications before anything can be changed or removed.

About the Aircraft and K2 Airways

The aircraft, registered AP-BOI, is a Boeing 737-4M0(BDSF). It began flying as a passenger aircraft with Aeroflot in 1999, then moved to Garuda Indonesia in 2004. In 2012, the aircraft was converted to a freighter and operated by TNT Airways, then ASL Airlines.

K2 Airways received its Air Operator’s Certificate on December 20, 2024, and began flight operations a week later on December 27, with its inaugural flight from Karachi to Lahore. The airline is a private Pakistani cargo carrier. It had also recently launched a Lahore-to-Tashkent cargo route in April 2026 using the same type of Boeing 737-400F aircraft.

The fact that the K2 Airways cargo plane was nearly 27 years old at the time of the incident will likely come under scrutiny during the formal investigation, though age alone does not cause crashes and many older aircraft fly safely when maintained properly.

Pakistan’s Civil Aviation Record

Pakistan’s aviation sector has faced serious safety questions before. The Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) oversees safety standards for all airlines operating in the country, including issuing Air Operator Certificates and carrying out regular audits. The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), the UN body that sets global aviation rules, monitors how well each country enforces those standards.

For a young cargo airline like K2 Airways, which had only been operating for about 18 months, an incident of this scale will put its safety culture, maintenance records, and regulatory compliance under a microscope.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is K2 Airways and what does it do?

K2 Airways is a private cargo airline in Pakistan, first founded in 2019. It was established under an Airline Charter licence issued by the Government of Pakistan. The airline operates domestic and international freight services using Boeing 737 freighter aircraft.

Where exactly did the K2 Airways cargo plane go missing?

Radar data showed the aircraft rapidly descending and making a sharp change in heading before radar and radio contact were lost about 155 nautical miles (287 kilometres) west of Karachi. Flight trackers suggested a possible crash in the sea southwest of Karachi.

Why was the K2 Airways office sealed?

The Bureau of Safety Investigation team planned to examine records at the airline’s offices as part of the investigation. Sealing the office ensures that maintenance logs, crew files, and communications remain untouched until investigators can review them fully.

How many crew members were on the missing K2 Airways cargo plane?

The airline confirmed that five crew members were on board the aircraft when contact was lost. They were Captain Mohammad Rizwan Idrees, First Officer Faisal Mehmood, Load Master Muhammad Toufique Khan, and engineers Arif Siddiqui and Muhammad Hamid. There were no passengers, as this was a cargo-only flight.

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