Coronavirus cases rise in Pakistan, weekly positivity surges past 10% in Karachi

People wait in queue for their turn to receive a dose of the Sinopharm Covid-19 vaccine at a vaccination centre in Karachi, Pakistan, on May 5, 2021. (AFP/File)
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Updated 20 June 2022
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Coronavirus cases rise in Pakistan, weekly positivity surges past 10% in Karachi

  • In March, Pakistan disbanded COVID-19 response body as infections were at lowest since start of pandemic in 2020
  • South Asian country reported 171 positive COVID-19 cases on Monday, with 1.53 percent positivity ratio, up from 0.82 percent in March

KARACHI: Coronavirus cases are once more on the rise in Pakistan, with the weekly positivity average in Karachi, the country’s largest city, crossing 10 percent as per data compiled by the provincial government on Sunday.

In late March, Pakistan disbanded the National Command and Operations Center (NCOC), which was overseeing the COVID-19 response in the country, as infection numbers were at the lowest since the start of the outbreak early in 2020.

Now once again COVID-19 infections are increasing in Pakistan, with 125 new infections reported on average each day. That’s 2 percent of the peak — the highest daily average reported on January 30.

There have been 1,532,153 infections and 30,383 coronavirus-related deaths reported in the country since the pandemic began.

The South Asian country reported 171 positive COVID-19 cases on Monday, with a 1.53 percent positivity ratio, up from 0.82 percent on March 31.

In Karachi, a spokesperson for the Sindh government said 28 people tested positive out of 354 tested on June 12, recording a positivity of 8.19 percent, which climbed to 13.64 percent as of June 18. Overall, the weekly average in Karachi was 10.62 percent.

The country had on March 16 lifted most restrictions aimed at stopping the spread of COVID-19. Pakistan has faced four infections waves in the last two years, which were effectively managed by the NCOC.

“With Covid indicators at all-time lows and high levels of vaccination, (the) baton (is) now being passed on to the health ministry,” then planning minister and NCOC chief Asad Umar had said when the coronavirus response center was disbanded.

Pakistan has administered at least 258,680,119 doses of COVID vaccines so far. Assuming every person needs two doses, that’s enough to have vaccinated about 59.7 percent of the country’s population.


Pakistan highlights economic reforms at Davos, eyes cooperation in AI, IT and minerals

Updated 21 January 2026
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Pakistan highlights economic reforms at Davos, eyes cooperation in AI, IT and minerals

  • Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif speaks at breakfast event in Davos at sidelines of World Economic Forum summit
  • Pakistan, rich in gold, copper reserves, has sought cooperation with China, US, Gulf countries in its mineral sector

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif highlighted Pakistan’s recent economic reforms during the sidelines of the ongoing World Economic Forum (WEF) summit in Davos on Wednesday, saying that his country was eyeing greater cooperation in mines and minerals, information technology, cryptocurrency and artificial intelligence with other states. 

The Pakistani prime minister was speaking at the Pakistan Pavilion in Davos on the sidelines of the WEF summit at a breakfast event. Sharif arrived in Switzerland on Tuesday to attend the 56th annual meeting of the WEF, which brings together global business leaders, policymakers and politicians to speak on social, economic and political challenges. 

Pakistan has recently undertaken several economic reforms, which include removing subsidies on energy and food, privatization of loss-making state-owned enterprises and expanding its tax base. Islamabad took the measures as part of reforms it agreed with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in exchange for a financial bailout package. 

“We are now into mines and minerals business in a big way,” Sharif said at the event. “We have signed agreements with American companies and Chinese companies.”

Islamabad has sought to attract foreign investment in its critical minerals sector in recent months. In April 2025, Pakistan hosted an international minerals summit where top companies and government officials from the US, Saudi Arabia, China, Türkiye, the UK, Azerbaijan, and other nations attended.

Pakistan is rich in gold, copper and lithium reserves as well as other minerals, yet its mineral sector contributes only 3.2 percent to the countrys GDP and 0.1 percent to global exports, according to official figures.

Sharif said Pakistan has been blessed with infinite natural resources which are buried in its mountains in the northern Gilgit-Baltistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Azad Kashmir and southwestern Balochistan regions. 

“But we have now decided to go forward at lightning speed,” he said. “And we are also moving speedily in the field of crypto, AI, IT.”

He said the government’s fiscal and economic measures have reduced inflation from nearly 30 percent a few years ago to single-digit figures, adding that its tax-to-GDP ratio had also increased from 9 to 10.5 percent. 

The prime minister admitted Pakistan’s exports face different kinds of challenges collectively, saying the country’s social indicators needed to improve. 

“But the way forward is very clear: that Pakistan has to have an export-led growth,” he said. 

SHARIF MEETS IMF MANAGING DIRECTOR

Separately, Sharif met IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva on improvements in Pakistan’s macroeconomic indicators, efforts toward stability and progress on institutional reforms, a statement from Sharif’s office said.

He emphasized Pakistan’s commitment to fiscal discipline, revenue mobilization and sustainable development, it added. 

The IMF managing director acknowledged and appreciated Pakistan’s reform efforts, the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) said.

“Both sides exchanged views on the global economic outlook, challenges facing emerging economies, and the importance of multilateral cooperation in safeguarding economic stability,” the PMO said.