Pakistan Medical Association asks WHO to help resolve vaccine approval obstacles for travelers

A health worker prepares to inoculate a man with a dose of the Sinopharm Covid-19 coronavirus at a vaccination centre in Karachi, Pakistan, on May 23, 2021. (AFP)
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Updated 02 August 2021
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Pakistan Medical Association asks WHO to help resolve vaccine approval obstacles for travelers

  • Asks that nations allow travelers to use any type of COVID-19 vaccines rather than limited brands
  • Says limiting approved list of jab manufacturers would hit travel and trade

KARACHI: The secretary general of the Pakistan Medical Association (PMA), Qaisar Sajjad, said the body had urged the World Health Organization (WHO) to help devise a policy making it mandatory for nations to allow travelers to be vaccinated with any brand of the COVID-19 vaccine, saying limiting the approved list of jab manufacturers would hit travel and trade.

Sajjad’s comments come after the PMA sent the WHO a letter highlighting concerns that a number of countries had made it mandatory for visitors to be vaccinated only with specific brands of COVID-19 shots.

“The concerned authorities of some countries have approved specific brands mandatory for incoming visitors,” the PMA wrote in a letter to WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

“We have approached the WHO because countries are using different brands of vaccines ... manufactured in different geographical locations, which means people are not being administered the same brand of vaccine globally," PMA’s Sajjad told Arab News.

Despite this, some countries have made it mandatory for visitors to be vaccinated by specific brands, which would have a "devastating" effect on international travel and trade.

“Keeping in view the above facts we request WHO to convince such countries to accept all vaccine brands approved by other countries for their citizens, otherwise it will create problems for people who wish to go abroad for employment, business, education, medical treatment and for other purposes,” Sajjad said.

Sajjad cited the example of Saudi Arabia, which had made the use of the Pfizer, AstraZeneca, Moderna, and Johnson and Johnson vaccines mandatory for all visitors to the kingdom, including for Hajj and Umrah pilgrims. Last week, Saudi health authorities added China's Sinopharm to its list of approved vaccines, bringing some relief to Pakistan where a government-run inoculation drive has - apart from limited AstaZena jabs - mostly used Chinese vaccines. 

Some of the most widely used vaccines around the world include Moderna, Pfizer, Sputnik, Oxford-AstraZeneca, Sinopharm, Sinovac, Covaxin,  Novavax, Johnson & Johnson, CornovaVac, and Covidecia.

Pakistan has so far vaccinated around five million people. 


Pakistan to invest $1 billion in AI by 2030 in push to modernize economy

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Pakistan to invest $1 billion in AI by 2030 in push to modernize economy

  • PM says government will introduce AI curriculum in schools nationwide
  • The transformation plan will help train 1 million non-IT professionals in AI

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Monday announced that Pakistan would invest $1 billion in artificial intelligence (AI) by 2030, in a major step to modernize the South Asian nation’s digital economy.

Pakistan, a country of 240 million people, seeks to become a key participant in the global AI economy, amid growing interest from governments in the Global South to harness AI for productivity, skills development and innovation.

The South Asian nation has been actively developing its AI landscape and approved its National AI Policy in July last year, which was followed by the launch of the country’s sovereign AI cloud and a startup fund.

Speaking at the launch of the Indus AI Week 2026 in Islamabad, Sharif unveiled a multi-pronged roadmap intended to transform Pakistan from a provider of IT technicians into a global hub for AI expertise.

“I am pleased to announce that the Government of Pakistan is committed to invest $1 billion in AI by 2030, which will go a long way in building AI ecosystem in our country,” he told policymakers and international tech experts at Islamabad’s Jinnah Convention Center.

Sharif detailed several flagship initiatives to support this transformation, including a sweeping educational reform, at the event organized by the Information Technology (IT) Ministry, which will be running until Feb. 15, featuring strategic dialogues on sovereign AI and technical showcases.

“AI curriculum will be introduced not only in all federally controlled or run schools, but also in all schools of AJK, that is Azad Jammu and Kashmir, and Gilgit-Baltistan, as well as remote parts of Balochistan,” he said.

The government will provide 1,000 fully funded PhD scholarships in AI to postgraduates to bolster high-level research, according to the PM. It plans to launch a nationwide program to train 1 million “non-IT professionals in AI skills” to enhance productivity and improve livelihoods across traditional sectors of the economy.

Sharif emphasized that the focus would remain on high-impact sectors, including agriculture, mines and minerals, and the empowerment of Pakistan’s youth which makes up 60 percent of its 240 million population.

“We will, God willing, bring in programs to transform them from IT technicians to AI experts, which will lead to our agriculture production in terms of its yield, its quality, its efficiency, like never before,” he said.

Drawing parallels to previous digitization efforts in the Punjab province, such as land record digitization and the establishment of the first IT university in Lahore, Sharif framed the AI push as a “gamechanger” for national governance. He noted the Federal Board of Revenue is already undergoing a digital overhaul to curb smuggling and tax evasion.

“Pakistan is absolutely ready to accept the challenge and walk with our global partners absolutely with great commitment and dedication,” he said. “Our commitment is solid, unwavering. We will never look back.”