Pakistan reports 12th polio case of the year in country’s northwest

A health worker administers polio vaccine drops to a child during a polio vaccination campaign in the Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on January 24, 2022. (AFP/File)
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Updated 14 July 2022
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Pakistan reports 12th polio case of the year in country’s northwest

  • Southern districts of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa are at highest risk of wild poliovirus transmission, says health ministry
  • 13 polio cases have been reported from Pakistan and Afghanistan this year

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan reported its 12th polio case of the year on Thursday in the country’s northwest tribal area, a former stronghold of the local Taliban that borders Afghanistan. 

Polio is a highly infectious disease caused by poliovirus mainly affecting children under the age of five years. It invades the nervous system and can cause paralysis or even death. However, children can be protected from its lifelong impact via vaccination. 

Most people residing in conservative Pakistan’s tribal areas consider the polio vaccination a Western campaign aimed at sterilizing the country’s population. In 2012, the local Taliban ordered a ban on immunization against polio in Pakistan’s western tribal areas. Dozens of polio workers have been killed in Pakistan in the line of duty.  

In April, the South Asian country detected the first case of the debilitating disease after a gap of 15 months. In less than three months, Pakistan has reported 11 more polio cases. 

“A 21-month-old boy has been paralyzed by wild polio in the 12th case in Pakistan this year. All children belong to North Waziristan,” Pakistan’s health ministry said. 

The child had an onset of paralysis on June 18 and belongs to Mir Ali, a town in North Waziristan district in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, confirmed the Pakistan National Polio Laboratory. 

The health ministry said the southern districts of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, which include North and South Waziristan, Dera Ismail Khan, Bannu, Tank and Lakki Marwat, are at the highest risk of wild poliovirus transmission.  

“Bannu also reported two positive environmental samples between April and May this year, confirming that ongoing wild poliovirus transmission is not limited to North Waziristan,” the statement read. 

“Even though these cases are happening in the same part of the country, parents and caregivers around Pakistan must remain extremely vigilant and give their children repeated doses of the polio vaccine,” Federal Health Secretary Dr. Fakhre Alam Irfan said in a statement. 

This year, 13 polio cases have been reported from Pakistan and Afghanistan, the only two countries in the world where polio remains endemic. 


Islamabad court sentences seven individuals to life imprisonment over ‘digital terrorism’

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Islamabad court sentences seven individuals to life imprisonment over ‘digital terrorism’

  • The convicts include Wajahat Saeed Khan, Shaheen Sahbahi, Haider Raza Mehdi, Adil Raja, Moeed Peerzada, Akbar Hussain and Sabir Shakir
  • The cases against them relate to May 9, 2023 riots over ex-PM Imran Khan’s arrest that saw vandalization of government, military installations

ISLAMABAD: An Islamabad anti-terrorism court (ATC) on Friday awarded two life sentences each to seven individuals, including journalists and YouTubers, over “digital terrorism,” in connection with May 9, 2023 riot cases.

The court sentenced Wajahat Saeed Khan, Shaheen Sahbahi, Haider Raza Mehdi, Adil Raja, Moeed Peerzada, Akbar Hussain and Sabir Shakir under various sections of the Anti-Terrorism Act and the Pakistan Penal Code.

The riots had erupted after former prime minister Imran Khan was briefly arrested in Islamabad on corruption charges on May 9, 2023, with his supporters attacking government buildings and military installations in several cities.

ATC judge Tahir Sipra announced the reserved verdict, following a trial in absentia of the above-mentioned individuals who were accused of “digital terrorism against the state on May 9.”

“The punishment awarded will be subject to the confirmation by Hon’ble Islamabad High Court,” the verdict read, referring to each count of punishment awarded to the convicts.

It also imposed multiple fined on the convicted journalists and YouTubers, who many see as being closed to Khan.

The prosecution presented 24 witnesses, while the court had appointed Gulfam Goraya as the counsel of the accused, most of whom happen to be outside Pakistan.

Pakistan’s anti-terrorism laws allow trials in absentia of the accused persons.

Thousands of supporters of Khan’s Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party were detained in the days that followed the May 2023 riots and hundreds were charged under anti-terrorism laws in a sweeping crackdown, with several cases transferred to military courts.

The government of PM Shehbaz Sharif accuses Khan’s party of staging violent protests in a bid to incite mutiny in the armed forces and to derail democracy in the country. The PTI denies inciting supporters to violence and says the government used the May 2023 protests as a pretext to victimize the party, a claim denied by the government.

The May 2023 riots took place a little over a year after Khan fell out with Pakistan’s powerful military, blaming the institution for colluding with his rivals to oust him from office in a parliamentary no-trust vote, a charge denied by the military.

Khan, who has been jailed since Aug. 2023 on a slew of charges, has led a campaign of unprecedented defiance against the country’s powerful military. He also accuses the then generals of rigging the Feb. 8, 2024 election in collusion with the election commission and his political rivals to keep him from returning to power. The military, election commission and Khan’s rivals deny the allegation.