Delta variant accounts for 50% new Pakistani COVID-19 cases — National Institute of Health

Women wait for their turn to receive a dose of the Covid-19 coronavirus Sinovac vaccine at a vaccination camp organised at expo centre in Karachi on June 3, 2021, as the head of a Pakistani province ordered that government employees who refuse to be vaccinated would not be paid from next month. (AFP)
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Updated 11 July 2021
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Delta variant accounts for 50% new Pakistani COVID-19 cases — National Institute of Health

  • Daily positivity rate in Pakistan jumps to 3.8 percent on Saturday from 1.79 percent on June 28
  • Pakistan reported more than 1,700 new infections for a third straight day, 7.1% positivity rate in federal capital

ISLAMABAD: The Delta COVID-19 variant is fast spreading across Pakistan, a senior official at the government-funded National Institute of Health (NIH) said on Saturday, confirming that half of the daily positive cases in the country were caused by the highly contagious strain.
The Delta variant, first identified in India last October and which is becoming dominant in many countries, is more easily transmitted than earlier versions of the coronavirus and is suspected to cause more severe disease, especially among younger people.
After a decline in coronavirus cases in recent weeks after a third wave of the pandemic, the daily positivity rate in Pakistan jumped to 3.8 percent on Saturday, from 1.79 percent on June 28. The positivity ratio in Islamabad has also increased to 7.1 percent in the last 24 hours, according to the district commissioner’s office, and Pakistan reported more than 1,700 new infections for a third straight day.
“Half of our daily coronavirus positive cases are found to be of Delta variant which is obviously not a good sign,” Dr. Mumtaz Ali Khan, a focal person at the NIH, told Arab News. “Clearly, the daily contribution of the Delta variant in the positive cases runs in the hundreds now,” he said, adding that almost all types of variants, including the United Kingdom and South Africa strains, were being detected in Pakistan.
Khan said inbound travelers from different countries, including the UK and United States, had brought the Delta variant to Pakistan, but it was yet to be seen if it was deadlier than other strains.
“Our teams have been screening inbound travelers at airports for COVID-19, and those found positive are quarantined to minimize the chances of the virus spreading in the general public,” the NIH focal person said.
The country has administered over 19 million COVID-19 vaccine doses since February and plans to inoculate about 65 million people by the end of the year.
To stem the “extremely dangerous” Delta variant, the National Command and Operation Center (NCOC), which formulates and coordinates the country’s pandemic response, placed a ban on air travel for unvaccinated people on Friday from August 1. It has also declared it mandatory for all adult students to get themselves vaccinated by August 31.
Britain said last week it would provide genomic sequencing support to Brazil, Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria and Pakistan to help identify, assess and track new variants of the novel coronavirus.
The novel coronavirus, which has killed 4 million people globally since it emerged in China in late 2019, mutates around once every few weeks, slower than influenza or HIV, but enough to require tweaks to vaccines.
Public Health England will extend support to Britain’s partners through the New Variant Assessment Platform Programme which tracks changes in the virus.
“Our government should direct its resources toward the study of local variants and try to develop vaccines as per the local genetic sequencing of the virus,” Professor Dr. Amir Ali Abbasi, chairperson of the National Centre for Bioinformatics at the Quaid-i-Azam University, told Arab News.
He said rapid genetic sequencing of the coronavirus could decrease the effectiveness of the vaccines for two to three months only: “Studying the virus structure and developing vaccines is ultimately the only way to deal with it.”


Pakistan police say 27 cops killed in 134 attacks in restive Bannu district in 2025

Updated 25 December 2025
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Pakistan police say 27 cops killed in 134 attacks in restive Bannu district in 2025

  • Bannu is a restive district in northwestern Pakistan where militants frequently attack law enforcers
  • Police say at least 20 drone attacks by militants killed nine civilians, injured 19 cops during the year

PESHAWAR: Police in Pakistan’s northwestern Bannu district said this week that at least 27 police personnel were killed in 134 attacks while 53 militants were killed during various security operations in the volatile area during the year, as Islamabad grapples with a surge in militancy. 

Bannu district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province is one of Pakistan’s most dangerous districts, where militants affiliated with the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) frequently target law enforcers in attacks. 

Regional Police Officer Sajjad Khan told reporters during a press briefing on Wednesday that at least 134 “terrorist attacks” were recorded in Bannu district during 2025 that targeted police stations, posts, checkpoints, police mobiles and police parties.

“As a result of these attacks, 27 police personnel were martyred and 79 were injured,” a statement issued by Bannu Police said on Wednesday. 

It said at least 168 intelligence-based operations were conducted by police across the district during the year, in which 105 militants were arrested and 65 were killed. 

Khan informed media that militants carried out 20 drone attacks targeting police installations and civilian areas in 2025, killing nine civilians and injuring 19 police personnel. 

“However, following the installation of an anti-drone system in Bannu district on Jul. 18, 2025, the situation improved significantly,” the statement said. “More than 300 drone attacks were thwarted, and four drones were struck/spoofed.”

He said the Bannu police force has been equipped with drones, anti-drone guns, sniper rifles, armored personnel carriers (APCs), thermal imaging systems, tactical helmets and bulletproof vehicles. 

“Bannu police reiterates its resolve to continue its struggle to maintain law and order in the district, completely eliminate terrorism and protect the lives and property of the public,” the statement concluded. 

Pakistan blames the Afghan government for facilitating TTP attacks inside its territory, a charge Kabul denies. The surge in militant attacks has strained ties between Pakistan and Afghanistan, leading to deadly border clashes in October that saw dozens killed and several wounded on both sides.