Dengue adds to COVID-hit Pakistan’s woes as Punjab becomes disease hotspot

A doctor (L) checks on a patient suffering from dengue fever under a net as he is treated at a government hospital in Karachi, Pakistan, on October 10, 2019. (AFP/File)
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Updated 28 September 2021
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Dengue adds to COVID-hit Pakistan’s woes as Punjab becomes disease hotspot

  • Punjab government says 174 dengue cases reported in last 24 hours, Pakistan Medical Association puts figure at around 1,000
  • Heavy monsoon rains are providing ideal environment for dengue-carrying mosquitoes to thrive in stagnant waters

LAHORE: Authorities in the Pakistani province of Punjab, already under pressure due to the coronavirus pandemic, are struggling to contain dengue fever with over 170 cases reported during the last 24 hours, provincial officials said on Tuesday, with cases recorded in all provinces of the country other than Balochistan.
Health experts say the illness is spreading across the province due to poor hygiene conditions, with heavy monsoon rain providing ideal environment for dengue-carrying mosquitoes to thrive in stagnant waters.
The first case of dengue was reported in Pakistan in 1994.
“We have recorded 174 dengue cases in Punjab in the last 24 hours,” provincial health secretary Imran Sikandar Baloch told Arab News. “Among them, 160 cases were diagnosed in Lahore.”
He said the province had reported a total 1,300 dengue cases since the outbreak of the disease in this monsoon season, adding that Lahore accounted for 1,077 of the total tally.
A senior official of the Pakistan Medical Association (PMA), however, said the government was downplaying the problem by sharing conservative figures.
“About 927 confirmed dengue cases have been reported in Punjab in the last 24 hours and more than 200 of them are from Lahore,” Dr. Qaisar Sajjad, PMA secretary general, said, describing dengue fever as a “recurring nightmare” for the province.

Dengue is a threat to nearly half of the world’s population. Of the estimated 220 million people infected each year, two million — mostly children in Latin America and Asia — develop a severe form called dengue hemorrhagic fever.

There is currently no cure or vaccine for dengue fever.
Health authorities in Islamabad are also on high alert due to the spread of dengue after a downward trend in coronavirus infections. Data collected by the district health officer show 217 dengue cases along with three deaths in the federal capital.
The situation is also causing concern among health officials in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province which has reported 1,162 cases since the outbreak of the disease, with 312 new cases diagnosed during the last 24 hours.
A dengue outbreak has also been witnessed in the country’s southeastern Sindh province where 508 cases have only been reported in the port city of Karachi since the beginning of the month. Balochistan is the only federating unit that has not reported a dengue case this year.
“There is no official confirmation of any dengue cases in the province,” Liaqat Shahwani, the Balochistan spokesperson, told Arab News. “However, we cannot rule out the possibility of one or two such cases.”


Pakistani students stuck in Afghanistan permitted to go home

Updated 12 January 2026
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Pakistani students stuck in Afghanistan permitted to go home

  • The border between the countries has been shut since Oct. 12
  • Worries remain for students about return after the winter break

JALALABAD: After three months, some Pakistani university students who were stuck in Afghanistan due to deadly clashes between the neighboring countries were “permitted to go back home,” Afghan border police said Monday.

“The students from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (northwest Pakistan) who were stuck on this side of the border, only they were permitted to cross and go to their homes,” said Abdullah Farooqi, Afghan border police spokesman.

The border has “not reopened” for other people, he said.

The land border has been shut since October 12, leaving many people with no affordable option of making it home.

“I am happy with the steps the Afghan government has taken to open the road for us, so that my friends and I will be able to return to our homes” during the winter break, Anees Afridi, a Pakistani medical student in eastern Afghanistan’s Nangarhar province, told AFP.

However, worries remain for the hundreds of students about returning to Afghanistan after the break ends.

“If the road is still closed from that side (Pakistan), we will be forced to return to Afghanistan for our studies by air.”

Flights are prohibitively expensive for most, and smuggling routes also come at great risk.

Anees hopes that by the time they return for their studies “the road will be open on both sides through talks between the two governments.”