Over 40 passengers from Gulf test positive for COVID-19 in Peshawar

An airport official checks the temperature of a passenger upon his arrival at the Bacha Khan International Airport in Peshawar on January 27, 2020. (AFP)
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Updated 21 May 2021
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Over 40 passengers from Gulf test positive for COVID-19 in Peshawar

  • A total of 42 travelers, mostly from Dubai and Abu Dhabi, landed in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on Thursday with coronavirus symptoms
  • Senior health officials say the province has 104 passengers in its quarantine facilities who mostly traveled from the UAE and Bahrain

PESHAWAR: At least 42 people arriving from the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain tested positive for COVID-19 after reaching the Peshawar airport on Thursday, authorities in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province told Arab News.

The infection was confirmed in passengers of three flights coming from Dubai and Abu Dhabi, according to Bacha Khan International Airport authorities.

“A total of 42 passengers, mostly from Dubai and Abu Dhabi, arrived here with coronavirus symptoms,” Bilal Faizi, a Rescue 1122 spokesperson, said. “These people belong to Swat, Peshawar, Waziristan, Parachinar, Bannu and other districts and are now in quarantine.”

A senior official at Peshawar’s Bacha Khan International Airport, who did not want to be named since he was not authorized to speak to the media, said the passengers came from Pakistan International Airlines, Emirates and Airblue flights.

“At least 36 passengers on a PIA flight tested positive for the virus on Thursday,” the official said.

Dr. Ikramullah Khan, director public health at Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s provincial health department, confirmed that the passengers who tested positive for the disease were quarantined in a nearby medical facility.

Those who could afford a hotel, he said, were allowed to complete their isolation period at a private lodging devoted to COVID-19 patients arriving from abroad.

“As of today, we have a total of 104 corona positive patients in quarantine facilities who primarily came from the UAE and Bahrain,” Khan added.

Latest statistics released by Pakistan’s National Command and Operation Center reveal that the total number of COVID-19 infections in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa since the beginning of the pandemic reached 128,561 on Friday,  with 3,875 deaths.


IMF team expected in Islamabad today for loan reviews amid reform scrutiny

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IMF team expected in Islamabad today for loan reviews amid reform scrutiny

  • Talks to cover third review of $7 billion bailout and second climate resilience assessment
  • Analysts flag revenue shortfall and energy reforms as potential sticking points in negotiations

KARACHI: An International Monetary Fund (IMF) staff mission is expected to arrive in Islamabad today, Wednesday, to begin discussions on key program reviews that will determine Pakistan’s continued access to funding under its $7 billion bailout and a parallel climate resilience facility.

The visit, confirmed last week by IMF communications director Julie Kozack, will cover the third review under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF) and the second review under the Resilience and Sustainability Facility (RSF), which supports climate-vulnerable countries.

“We do have a staff team that is expected to visit Pakistan starting February 25th for discussions on the third review under the EFF and the second review under the RSF,” Kozack said at a regular press briefing last week.

The talks come at a sensitive moment for Islamabad, which has spent the past year implementing tax increases, subsidy rationalization and tight monetary policy to stabilize an economy that teetered on the brink of default in 2023.

IMF officials have credited those measures with producing measurable gains. Kozack said Pakistan’s policy efforts under the EFF had helped stabilize the economy and rebuild confidence, pointing to a primary fiscal surplus of 1.3 percent of GDP in the last fiscal year, contained inflation and the country’s first current account surplus in 14 years.

The review is expected to probe fiscal discipline and energy sector reforms, two areas that have historically complicated negotiations between Islamabad and the Fund.

Analysts told Arab News last week that while approval of the next tranche is likely, discussions might not be straightforward.

“This is expected to be a smooth sailing. However, questions might arise,” Shankar Talreja, head of research at Karachi-based Topline Securities Limited, said earlier.

He pointed to a revenue shortfall of Rs336 billion ($1.2 billion) against IMF targets and raised the possibility that the Fund may seek clarification over the government’s recent reduction in electricity tariffs for export-oriented industries, a move designed to support manufacturing but with fiscal implications.

A positive outcome of the review is vital for continued disbursements under the EFF and RSF programs. It will also be important to sustain investor confidence as the country seeks to consolidate its fragile economic recovery.

A successful staff-level review leads to a provisional agreement between the two sides, which then requires approval by the Fund’s Executive Board before the disbursement of the next tranche.