Pakistan to get 3 mln doses of COVID-19 vaccines from China’s CanSino next month

A medical attendant prepares to innoculate a senior citizen with a Chinese-made Sinopharm vaccine against the Covid-19 coronavirus, at a vaccination centre in Islamabad on March 30, 2021. (AFP/File)
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Updated 30 March 2021
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Pakistan to get 3 mln doses of COVID-19 vaccines from China’s CanSino next month

  • Planning minister says Pakistan to get “bulk vaccine” by mid-April from CanSino from which 3 million doses would be made in Islamabad
  • Last week Pakistan said it had bought more than 1 million doses of Chinese Sinopharm and CanSino Biologics COVID-19 vaccines

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will import more coronavirus vaccines made by China’s CanSino Biologics next month, equivalent to 3 million doses, the minister in charge for COVID-19 operations said on Tuesday.
Pakistan began a vaccination drive last month with over a million doses of Sinopharm vaccines donated by long-time ally China, but is scrambling to get more supplies as it awaits WHO/COVAX/GAVI allocations of AstraZeneca’s vaccine, which have been delayed.
“We will be getting the bulk vaccine by mid-April from CanSino, from which 3 million doses can be made,” the minister, Asad Umar said on Twitter.
“The bulk vaccine received will be formulated, sterilized and packed in Pakistan,” he said.

Coronavirus infections have risen sharply in Pakistan in recent weeks and outgoing finance minister Abdul Hafeez Shaikh tested positive for COVID-19 on Tuesday, the third senior government official to do so within 24 hours.
Prime Minister Imran Khan had tested positive last week.
Pakistan was also due to receive a previously ordered batch of 60,000 doses of the CanSino vaccine on Tuesday, Umar said, and it expects to receive another shipment of 1 million doses of Sinopharm’s vaccine this week.

The Sinopharm and CanSino vaccines arriving this week are the first that Pakistan has purchased, rather than being donations.
Pakistan had been due to receive a first batch of up to four million doses of GAVI’s total allocation of 45 million doses earlier this month, but that was delayed with AstraZeneca’s Indian manufacturer citing domestic needs.
Pakistan reported 100 deaths from COVID-19 in the last 24 hours, and 4,084 new infections, with a national test positive rate of 8.8%.
The country has so far recorded 14,356 deaths and 663,200 cases of the coronavirus.
Besides the outgoing finance minister, who was removed from the post on Monday in a government shake-up, President Arif Alvi and Defense Minister Pervez Khattak announced they had both tested positive for COVID-19.


Rating firm S&P says it won’t rush Iran war downgrades, sees risks for countries like Pakistan

Updated 12 March 2026
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Rating firm S&P says it won’t rush Iran war downgrades, sees risks for countries like Pakistan

  • Agency says it is monitoring indebted energy importers as higher oil prices strain finances
  • Gulf economies seen better placed to weather shock, though Bahrain flagged as vulnerable

LONDON: S&P Global ‌said it would not make any knee-jerk sovereign rating cuts following the outbreak of war in the ​Middle East, but warned on Thursday that soaring oil and gas prices were putting a number of already cash-strapped countries at risk.

The firm’s top analysts said in a webinar that the conflict, which has involved US and Israeli strikes ‌against Iran and Iranian ‌strikes against Israel, ​US ‌bases ⁠and Gulf ​states, ⁠was now moving from a low- to moderate-risk scenario.

Most Gulf countries had enough fiscal buffers, however, to weather the crisis for a while, with more lowly rated Bahrain the only clear exception.

Qatar’s banking sector could ⁠also struggle if there were significant ‌deposit outflows in ‌reaction to the conflict, although there ​was no evidence ‌of such strains at the moment, they ‌said.

“We don’t want to jump the gun and just say things are bad,” S&P’s head global sovereign analyst, Roberto Sifon-Arevalo, said.

The longer the crisis ‌was prolonged, though, “the more difficult it is going to be,” he ⁠added.

Sifon-Arevalo ⁠said Asia was the second-most exposed region, due to many of its countries being significant Gulf oil and gas importers.

India, Thailand and Indonesia have relatively lower reserves of oil, while the region also had already heavily indebted countries such as Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka whose finances would be further hurt by rising energy prices.

“We ​are closely monitoring ​these (countries) to see how the credit stories evolve,” Sifon-Arevalo said.