Threats of cellphone blocks, work bans boost Pakistan’s vaccination rate 

Residents line up to receive a vaccine against COVID-19 at a drive-through vaccination facility in Karachi, Pakistan, on July 29, 2021. (REUTERS)
Short Url
Updated 05 August 2021
Follow

Threats of cellphone blocks, work bans boost Pakistan’s vaccination rate 

  • The thousands who thronged to vaccine centers seemed more afraid of restrictions than threat of COVID-19
  • Out of population of 220 million, only 6.7 million people have been fully vaccinated 

ISLAMABAD: Tens of thousands of Pakistanis are thronging coronavirus vaccination centers daily after officials announced penalties for the unvaccinated, including blocked cell phones and barred access to offices, restaurants, shopping malls and transport. 
Queues for inoculations stretched more than a kilometer in some locations this week, in response to measures designed to help slow a Delta variant-fueled surge in infections that has put pressure on Pakistan’s poor health infrastructure. 
In a country that has a long anti-vaccination history, health workers said many in line were more afraid of the restrictions — some started Aug. 1 while others kick in on Aug. 30 — than the health threat of COVID-19. That perception was supported by people queuing who spoke to Reuters. 
“I’m personally not scared of corona,” said banker Abdul Rauf as he stood in a queue at a vaccination center in southern Karachi, with his mask down to chin. 
“Our salaries will be stopped, our SIMs will be blocked, so all these things are out there, so that’s why I got my second dose done.”
Pakistan has a long anti-vaccination history — Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan are the only countries in the world where polio is still an endemic disease — and COVID-19 hesitancy has been high.
Out of a population of 220 million, only 6.7 million people have been fully vaccinated, according to the National Command and Operations Center (NCOC), a military run body that oversees the COVID-19 operations. 
Pakistan’s federal government announced late last month it would ban staff from entering public offices, schools, restaurants, transport, shopping malls and air travel without vaccination certificates.
The announcement prompted an immediate rise in vaccination rates, which hit one million a day last week. 
“I came here and obtained this card after getting the vaccination, merely because I have to travel abroad, and I will not be able to travel without doing this,” said Mohammad Atiq Qureshi, a lawyer in Karachi. 
The local government in the southern province of Sindh went even further, warning it could withhold the salaries of government servants and block people’s cellphone SIM cards unless they had the required certificates. 
“There is a small percentage who are coming to get a shot for fear of the disease or for their safety, but majority of the people are coming for fear of having their business closed ... or the youngsters who want a shot for fear that their SIMs will be blocked,” said Dr. Jamila said, a health worker at one of the vaccination centers.

NO VACCINE, NO BIG MAC 
Pakistan on Thursday reported 5,661 new COVID-19 cases, the highest single-day number in more than three months, and 60 deaths. Around 70 percent of the new cases are the Delta variant and more than 4,000 people in critical condition, officials said.
The country has recorded more than one million infections and around 23,600 deaths since the beginning of the pandemic. 
Health Minister Faisal Sultan said the requirement of a vaccination certificate had “helped to encourage vaccination.” 
Murtaza Wahab, a Sindh provincial government spokesman, said work was underway on the logistics of blocking cell phones. 
Anecdotal reports suggested some businesses had already begun restrictions on service. 
“We were denied McDonald’s at a rest area on a motorway if we couldn’t show a text message to prove that we are vaccinated,” said Moiz Raja, who traveled from Islamabad to eastern Lahore city last week. 


Pakistan’s pre-Hajj flight operation in full swing as over 9,844 pilgrims arrive in Madinah

Updated 13 May 2024
Follow

Pakistan’s pre-Hajj flight operation in full swing as over 9,844 pilgrims arrive in Madinah

  • Pakistan has operated almost 40 flights from major cities since May 9, says state-run media 
  • Pilgrims to depart for Makkah from May 17 after completing eight-day stay in Madinah 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s pre-Hajj flight operation is in full swing as more than 9,844 pilgrims have so far reached Madinah from different parts of the South Asian country via 40 flights, the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) reported on Monday. 

Muhammad Umar Butt, a spokesperson of Pakistan’s religion ministry, told APP three flights each from Islamabad and Karachi, four from Lahore, and one each from Multan and Sialkot on Sunday transported 3,254 Hajj pilgrims to Madinah ahead of the Hajj pilgrimage. 

“Since May 9, different airlines operated almost 40 flights from major cities of Pakistan to transport the guests of Allah Almighty to the holy city of Madinah in first leg of their pilgrimage,” APP said. 

Butt said from May 17, Pakistani pilgrims who have completed their eight-day stay in Madinah will start departing for the holy city of Makkah where Muslims from across the world will start gathering for the annual pilgrimage. 

He said the ministry has taken “elaborate arrangements” to extend maximum facilities to pilgrims from both Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. He said before the pre-Hajj flight operation kicked off on May 9, the religion ministry held extensive training sessions to teach Pakistani pilgrims about Hajj obligatory acts and informed them about key arrangements made by the government to ensure their pilgrimage remains hassle-free. 

Butt said the ministry, under the Pakistan Hajj Mission has established two full-fledged hospitals, one each in Makkah and Madinah. There, he said, doctors and paramedic staff perform duties round the clock. 

“A total of 66 doctors and paramedics have been deployed at the hospitals, where medical checkups are conducted and medicines are being provided free of cost,” he said. 

Hajj is one of the five pillars of Islam and requires every adult Muslim to undertake the journey to the holy Islamic sites in Makkah at least once in their lifetime if they are financially and physically able.

Pakistan has a Hajj quota of 179,210 pilgrims this year, according to the Pakistani religious affairs ministry. Of them, 63,805 pilgrims will be performing the pilgrimage under the government scheme, while the rest would be accommodated by private tour operators.

This year’s pilgrimage is expected to run from June 14 till June 19.


IMF mission in Pakistan for bailout loan talks 

Updated 13 May 2024
Follow

IMF mission in Pakistan for bailout loan talks 

  • Pakistan last month completed a short-term $3 billion program, which helped stave off sovereign debt default
  • Pakistan expected to seek t $6 billion, request additional financing from Fund under Resilience and Sustainability Trust

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani government confirmed on Monday that an International Monetary Fund team was in Islamabad and holding discussions with finance ministry officials, as Islamabad kicks off talks with the fund over a longer-term bailout program.

Pakistan last month completed a short-term $3 billion program, which helped stave off sovereign default, but the government of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has stressed the need for a fresh, longer term program.

Finance minister Muhammad Aurangzeb said last week the IMF mission would visit Islamabad in May and Pakistan hoped to have a deal by early July. 

“The IMF team has arrived in Islamabad and currently talks are underway with them in the finance ministry,” Raeesa Adil, Director General Media at the Finance Ministry told Arab News, declining to share further details of what was being discussed.

Pakistan narrowly averted default last summer, and its $350 billion economy has stabilized after the completion of the last IMF program, with inflation coming down to around 17 percent in April from a record high 38 percent last May.

It is still dealing with a high fiscal shortfall and while it has controlled its external account deficit through import control mechanisms, it has come at the expense of stagnating growth, which is expected to be around 2 percent this year compared to negative growth last year.

Pakistan is expected to seek at least $6 billion and request additional financing from the Fund under the Resilience and Sustainability Trust.
 


Pakistan skipper Babar Azam becomes most successful T20I men’s captain after Ireland win

Updated 13 May 2024
Follow

Pakistan skipper Babar Azam becomes most successful T20I men’s captain after Ireland win

  • Pakistan beat Ireland on Sunday by seven wickets, making it Babar Azam’s 45th win as skipper
  • Pakistan and Ireland will play the final of three-match T20I series in Dublin on Tuesday 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan skipper Babar Azam became the most successful men’s T20I captain after his side clinched a seven-wicket victory over Ireland recently, the International Cricket Council (ICC) said on Monday. 

Pakistan beat Ireland on Sunday by seven wickets and more than three overs to spare, chasing the Irish team’s impressive target of 194 runs. Azam made 0 runs off four balls after he was dismissed by Graham Hume when he edged the ball straight into the hands of Lorcan Tucker but his poor performance had no effect on Pakistan. 

An impressive 140-run partnership between Mohammad Rizwan and left-arm batter Fakhar Zaman helped Pakistan to victory over Ireland. it also helped Azam to a new record. 

“It took Babar past Uganda’s Brian Masaba for the most wins by male T20I captains and in front of former skippers in the ilk of England’s Eoin Morgan, India’s MS Dhoni and Australia’s Aaron Finch,” the ICC said. 

Separately, Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chairman Mohsin Naqvi congratulated Azam in Dublin after the match and presented him a jersey with the words “45 T20I wins” written on its back. Naqvi also presented fast bowler Shaheen Shah Afridi with a jersey for taking 300 international wickets in his career so far. The fast bowler also achieved the feat in the match against Ireland after he returned figures of 3/49. 

The three-match series stands leveled at 1-1 after Pakistan’s win. Ireland beat the 2009 T20 world champions by five wickets in an upset victory in the series opener on Friday. 

Pakistan will head to England for a four-match T20I series after the final match of the Ireland series on Tuesday. Following the England series, with matches scheduled at Headingley (22 May), Birmingham (25 May), Cardiff (28 May), and The Oval, London (30 May), both England and Pakistan will head to the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2024. 

England will face Scotland in Barbados on June 4 in their opening match, while Pakistan will launch their campaign against the United States (US) in Dallas on June 6. Pakistan will take on arch-rivals India on June 9 in New York which is set to be one of the most anticipated clashes of the T20 World Cup.


Egypt’s Zakaria beats Pakistan’s Iqbal to clinch international squash competition in Karachi

Updated 13 May 2024
Follow

Egypt’s Zakaria beats Pakistan’s Iqbal to clinch international squash competition in Karachi

  • Mohamed Zakaria beat Nasir Iqbal 11-13, 11-4, 11-5 and 11-7 to clinch the international squash competition 
  • Five local players and 19 international ones participated in the CNS International Squash Competition in Karachi 

ISLAMABAD: Egypt’s Mohamed Zakaria defeated Pakistan’s Nasir Iqbal on Sunday to clinch the 16th Chief of Naval Staff (CNS) International Squash Championship 2024 in Karachi. 

Held in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi, five domestic and 19 international squash players participated in the championship. Competitors from Egypt, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Czech Republic, Japan, Germany, Great Britain and the Netherlands took part in the competition, Pakistan Army’s media wing said in a statement on Sunday. 

Zakaria beat Iqbal 11-13, 11-4, 11-5, and 11-7 to clinch the trophy and walk away with the lucrative prize money of $20,000. 

“Mohammed Zakaria of Egypt declared the winner of the 16th Chief of the Naval Staff International Squash Championship 2024,” the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the army’s media wing, said. 

The closing ceremony of the tournament was held at the Pakistan Navy Roshan Khan Jahangir Khan Squash Complex in Karachi. Pakistan Navy Chief Admiral Naveed Ashraf was the chief guest at the ceremony. 

“The naval chief distributed prizes to the winners and runners-up players of the championship,” the ISPR said, adding that the closing ceremony was attended by a large number of civil and military dignitaries, sponsors, national players and fans. 

Pakistan has always been counted among the world’s top squash-playing nations, introducing legendary players of the sport such as Jahangir Khan, Jansher Khan, Azam Khan, and Qamar Zaman to the world. Between themselves, Jansher Khan and Jahangir Khan won the World Squash Open title 14 times for Pakistan during the ‘80s and the ‘90s.


Deputy PM in China as Beijing pushes for safety of personnel working in Pakistan

Updated 13 May 2024
Follow

Deputy PM in China as Beijing pushes for safety of personnel working in Pakistan

  • Ishaq Dar will co-chair strategic dialogue with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on four-day visit to Beijing 
  • Visit comes amid investment push by Islamabad, rising Beijing concerns about security of personnel in Pakistan

ISLAMABAD: Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar arrived in Beijing on Monday to take part in a strategic dialogue with Chinese FM Wang Yi, Pakistan’s foreign office said in a statement, during a four-day visit in which the security of Chinese organizations and personnel working in the South Asian nation is expected to be at the top of the agenda. 

China is a major ally and investor in Pakistan but both separatist and other militants have attacked Chinese projects over recent years, killing Chinese personnel, including five workers in a latest suicide bombing in March. Under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a flagship project under China’s Belt and Road Initiative, Beijing has pledged more than $65 billion for road, rail and other infrastructure developments in the South Asian nation of 241 million people.

Beijing has also readily provided financial assistance to bail out its often-struggling neighbor, including in July last year when China granted Pakistan a two-year rollover on a $2.4 billion loan, giving the debt-saddled nation much-needed breathing space as it tackled a balance-of-payments crisis.

This is Dar’s first official trip to China since assuming the post of foreign minister and deputy prime minister. He will co-chair the fifth round of the Pakistan-China Foreign Ministers’ Strategic Dialogue with Yi, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA) said. 

“The Deputy Prime Minister will also hold meetings with Chinese leaders and senior officials and with prominent business enterprises,” MoFA said. 

In an earlier statement, MoFA said Dar and his counterpart would discuss issues of core interest like economic and trade cooperation, including CPEC and regional peace and development.

Dar’s visit to China takes place as Pakistan moves to seek foreign investments from its allies while navigating an economic crisis that has seen its reserves dip to dangerously low levels and its currency weaken against the dollar. In recent weeks, Pakistan has seen visits by top officials from Saudi Arabia, Japan and Uzbekistan to discuss investment deals.