Pakistan to receive first shipment of 1.2 million vaccine doses under COVAX on Friday

This photograph taken on February 24, 2021 shows a Covax tag on a shipment of Covid-19 vaccines from the Covax global Covid-19 vaccination programme, at the Kotoka International Airport in Accra. (AFP)
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Updated 05 May 2021
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Pakistan to receive first shipment of 1.2 million vaccine doses under COVAX on Friday

  • Pakistan plans to vaccinate at least 20 percent of 220 million population through jabs received under Covax program for poor nations
  • First shipment of jabs from Covax to finally arrive from South Korea, Rana Muhammad Safdar at Ministry of Health says

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will on Friday receive the first shipment of 1.2 million doses of the Oxford-Astrazeneca coronavirus vaccine under the Covax program, the global initiative to provide vaccines to countries lacking the clout to negotiate for scarce supplies on their own, a top government official said on Tuesday. 

The Covax program had committed 45 million doses to Pakistan, with deliveries meant to start in March and continue through the year. But India — the world’s second largest manufacturer of the vaccine — halted supplies to fulfill its domestic needs amid a catastrophic second wave of the virus. 

Now, the first shipment of jabs from Covax will finally arrive from South Korea, Rana Muhammad Safdar, director-general health at the Ministry of National Health Services, told Arab News. 

The South Asian nation of 220 million people plans to vaccinate at least 20 percent of its population through jabs received under the Covax program. 

“Yes, first consignment is arriving on 7th May,” Safdar confirmed. “We are committed to vaccinating our maximum population as quickly as possible.”

As of Monday, the government had vaccinated over 2.76 million people and is planning to vaccinate at least 70 million people by the end of this year, the health chief has said. 

The Covax program aims to deliver at least two billion coronavirus vaccine doses by the end of 2021 to cover 20 percent of the most vulnerable people in 91 poor and middle-income countries, mostly in Africa, Asia and Laten America. The World Health Organization (WHO) and global vaccine charities launched the program last April. 

The scheme, relied on by dozens of poorer countries, has faced setbacks: production glitches, a lack of support from wealthy nations and a recent move by India, the biggest vaccine manufacturer, to curb its exports.

Besides the WHO, it is run by the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI), Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) and UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF).


Fear, shock grip southwestern Pakistan day after deadly separatist attacks

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Fear, shock grip southwestern Pakistan day after deadly separatist attacks

  • Separatist militants carrying assault rifles stormed banks, jails, police stations and military installations, killing 31 civilians and 17 security personnel
  • Mobile Internet, train services remained suspended across Pakistan’s Balochistan on Sunday, with major roads and businesses deserted after attacks

QUETTA: Residents in the southwestern Pakistani city of Quetta were in shock and feared more violence, they said on Sunday, following deadly separatist attacks that killed nearly 200 people, including militants, security personnel and civilians, in the Balochistan province.

Authorities in Balochistan are battling one of the deadliest flare-ups in years as ethnic Baloch separatists step up assaults on security forces, civilians and infrastructure in the resource-rich province bordering Iran and Afghanistan.

Separatist militants carrying assault rifles stormed banks, jails, police stations and military installations in a string of coordinated attacks in several cities of Balochistan, including the provincial capital of Quetta, early Saturday.

Officials said the attacks killed 31 civilians and 17 security personnel, while 145 militants were killed in skirmishes and follow-up operations. The assaults were claimed by the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) separatist group.

“The fear and anger are palpable in the city’s atmosphere following yesterday’s attacks at various locations in Quetta and other cities of Balochistan,” Zain Ali, a resident of Quetta’s Brewery Road, told Arab News on Sunday.

“We used to think that there is insurgency in Balochistan but Quetta is safe but that perception has been shattered.”

Balochistan has long been the site of a separatist insurgency that has intensified in recent years, with the BLA emerging as the most influential of separatist groups operating in the region.

The separatists, who frequently target security forces, foreigners, government officials and non-local Pakistanis, accuse the central government of stealing the region’s resources to fund development elsewhere in the country. The Pakistani government denies the allegations and says it is working for the uplift of local communities in Balochistan.

Saturday’s pre-dawn attacks by BLA targeted high-security government installations in Balochistan’s Quetta, Gwadar, Dalbandin, Pasni, Nushki, Kalat, Turbat and Mastung cities. 

Ali, who teaches at a private school and stepped out of home to buy groceries on Sunday, said he experiences an “unexplainable fear” of a sudden ambush by armed men on his way to downtown Quetta.

“If the capital is not safe, how would you expect security in rural areas of Balochistan,” Zain said. “The government has to take decisive action against these elements.”

On Sunday, mobile Internet and train services remained suspended across the province, with major roads and businesses deserted after the attacks.

Hafiz Ameer Muhammad, a security guard at a government’s run bank in Quetta’s Hazar Ganji area, recounted the horror when the militants stormed the city’s busiest business market, attacking several bank branches and torching goods and equipment.

“They came here at 10am and fired upon the gate but we didn’t let them in,” he told Arab News. “They broke the window and got inside and threatened us to hand over the weapons or face death.”

Dr. Mansoor Tareen, a dentist at Quetta’s Liaquat Bazar, said he feared more such attacks.

“Unfortunately, the government is limited to media and newspapers,” he said.

Pakistan’s military said the attacks were launched by “Indian-sponsored Fitna al Hindustan,” a reference it uses for Baloch separatist groups. India has denied any involvement.

In a statement on Saturday, the BLA said it had launched “Operation Herof 2.0,” claiming responsibility for attacks at multiple locations across Balochistan. Saturday’s assaults were similar to coordinated attacks carried out by the group in Aug. 2024, which killed dozens of people in various districts of Balochistan.

Balochistan Chief Minister Sarfraz Bugti has vowed his government would not surrender and would fight the militants until they are eliminated.

“We will fight this war for 1,000 years,” he said on Sunday. “This country is ours. This is our motherland. We will fight for it.”