Pakistan develops quarantine app for incoming travelers to curb COVID-19

The photograph released by Pakistan's foreign ministry on April 14, 2020 shows stranded Pakistanis queuing up at the airport in Tokyo. (Photo courtesy: MOFA Pakistan/Twitter)
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Updated 11 July 2020
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Pakistan develops quarantine app for incoming travelers to curb COVID-19

  • The app will be rolled out in the next few days, says national information technology board’s top official
  • IT experts raise privacy concerns, say the government lacks the ability to analyze data

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has developed a mobile application to keep track of travelers entering the country through land routes and airports to ensure the mandatory 14-day self-quarantine for those who test positive for the novel coronavirus.

“The app will be rolled out in a few days,” Shabahat Ali Shah, chief executive officer of the National Information Technology Board, told Arab News this week.

He said the app will help record symptoms of the incoming travelers and keep track of their location. It will also communicate coronavirus results to them and check if they are in violation of the self-quarantine requirement.

Until recently, the government was testing everyone entering the country. Many travelers were kept at big isolation centers established in hotels and marquees for 14 days to prevent the spread of the virus. According to government functionaries, the new app will eliminate the cost of associated with the old quarantine protocols and maintain a better record of people’s movements.

Pakistan has registered 246,351 coronavirus infections since late February with over 5,000 deaths. The government has also been doing contact tracing to test suspected people and sent over half a million text messages to those who came into close contact with COVID-19 patients, according to the Ministry of National Health Services.

“We don’t share contact tracing numbers with the public since they keep changing on a daily basis,” Shah said, adding that suspected individuals were requested through telephone calls to get themselves tested for the debilitating respiratory disease.

Discussing the projections, he said the numbers of coronavirus cases would keep changing but the government’s actions had proved successful in bringing down the infection rate in the country.

“Smart lockdowns in different areas have helped reduce the disease,” Shah said, adding the decision to lockdown virus hotspots was taken on the basis of data collected by the NITB.

He claimed that the COVID-19 curve would flatten if the government properly managed Eid Al-Adha and Muharram processions in the coming months.

According to independent information technology analysts, the app would prove ineffective if “big data” was not properly analyzed.

“Developing an app is not a big deal,” Mustaneer Abdullah, an IT expert, told Arab News. “The real task is to extract useful information through the algorithms and break it down in specific categories to achieve the desired targets. The trouble is that government departments lack that kind of expertise.”

He also pointed out that such apps were hazardous to public privacy in the absence of data protection laws since they sought permission from users at the time of installation to access their photo galleries, locations and contact lists to work smoothly.

“The data collected through these apps can also be a goldmine for scoundrels,” he continued. “People working with government departments could leak user information to digital marketers or fraudsters with total impunity.”


Pakistan condemns Sudan attack that killed Bangladeshi UN peacekeepers, calls it war crime

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Pakistan condemns Sudan attack that killed Bangladeshi UN peacekeepers, calls it war crime

  • Six peacekeepers were killed in a drone strike in Kadugli as fighting between Sudan’s army and the RSF grinds on
  • Pakistan, a major troop contributor to the UN, says perpetrators of the attack must be identified, brought to justice

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Sunday extended condolences to the government and people of Bangladesh after six United Nations peacekeepers from the country were killed in a drone strike in southern Sudan, condemning the attack and describing it as a war crime.

The attack took place amid a full-scale internal conflict that erupted in April 2023 between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a powerful paramilitary group, following a power struggle after the collapse of Sudan’s post-Bashir political transition.

Omar Al-Bashir, who ruled Sudan for nearly three decades, was ousted by the military in 2019 after months of mass protests, but efforts to transition to civilian rule later faltered, plunging the country back into violence that has since spread nationwide.

The drone strike hit a logistics base of the United Nations Interim Security Force for Abyei (UNISFA) in Kadugli, the capital of South Kordofan state, on Saturday, killing the Bangladeshi peacekeepers. Sudan’s army blamed the RSF for the attack, though there was no immediate public claim of responsibility.

“Pakistan strongly condemns the attack on @UNISFA in Kadugli, resulting in the tragic loss of 6 Bangladeshi peacekeepers & injuries to several others,” the country’s permanent mission to the UN said in a social media message. “We honor their supreme sacrifice in the service of peace, and express our deepest condolences to the government and people of #Bangladesh.”

“Such heinous attacks on UN peacekeepers amount to war crimes,” it added. “Perpetrators of this horrific attack must be identified and brought to justice. As a major troop-contributing country, we stand in complete solidarity with all Blue Helmets serving the cause of peace in the perilous conditions worldwide.”

According to Pakistan’s UN mission in July, the country has deployed more than 235,000 peacekeepers to 48 UN missions across four continents over the past eight decades.

Pakistan also hosts one of the UN’s oldest peacekeeping operations, the United Nations Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP), and is a founding member of the UN Peacebuilding Commission.

More than 180 Pakistani peacekeepers have lost their lives while serving under the UN flag.

Pakistan and Bangladesh have also been working in recent months to ease decades of strained ties rooted in the events of 1971, when Bangladesh — formerly part of Pakistan — became independent following a bloody war.

Relations have begun to shift following the ouster of former Bangladeshi prime minister Sheikh Hasina last year amid mass protests.

Hasina later fled to India, Pakistan’s neighbor and arch-rival, creating space for Islamabad and Dhaka to rebuild their relationship.