Pakistan seeks closer coordination with Saudi Arabia as evacuation begins from battle-scarred Sudan

A handout picture provided by the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) on April 22, 2023, shows members of the armed forces passing out chocolates and flowers to Saudi citizens and other nationals upon their arrival in Jeddah, following their rescue from Sudan. (Photo courtesy: SPA)
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Updated 23 April 2023
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Pakistan seeks closer coordination with Saudi Arabia as evacuation begins from battle-scarred Sudan

  • Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari spoke with his Saudi counterpart Prince Faisal bin Farhan over the phone
  • The two officials also discussed efforts to stop the military escalation between the conflicting parties in Sudan

ISLAMABAD: Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari expressed his gratitude to Saudi Arabia on Sunday for evacuating Pakistani nationals from Sudan amid heavy fighting between two rival military factions in the northeastern African state, while hoping for continued coordination with the kingdom over the issue in the coming days.

In a phone call with his counterpart, Prince Faisal bin Farhan, the Pakistani foreign minister also conveyed Eid greetings to the leaders and people of Saudi Arabia.

The two officials discussed regional and global issues, with the Pakistani minister expressing confidence that the resumption of the kingdom’s diplomatic relations with Iran would lead to greater peace and prosperity across the neighborhood.

“The Foreign Minister [Bhutto-Zardari] expressed profound gratitude for the Kingdom’s assistance in the evacuation of Pakistani nationals from Sudan,” the foreign office in Islamabad said in an official statement. “The Foreign Ministers agreed that the two countries will closely coordinate to further facilitate evacuations from Sudan.”

According to a statement by the Saudi foreign ministry, the two officials “also discussed efforts to stop the military escalation between the conflicting parties [in Sudan], end the violence, and provide the necessary protection for Sudanese civilians and residents.”

Pakistan and Saudi Arabia are bound by a fraternal relationship marked by mutual trust and understanding, close cooperation, and an abiding tradition of supporting each other.

The kingdom is also home to more than two million Pakistanis who have contributed to the progress, prosperity, and economic development of the two countries.


Pakistan partners with Swiss firm to provide free cancer treatment to patients

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Pakistan partners with Swiss firm to provide free cancer treatment to patients

  • In Pakistan, more than 185,000 new cancer cases and over 125,000 deaths are reported annually
  • Under the agreement, Roche Pakistan will bear 70% cost of cancer medicines, government will pay 30%

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has partnered with a leading Swiss pharmaceutical firm, Roche, to provide costly cancer treatment to Pakistani patients free of cost, the country’s health minister said on Friday, as the two sides signed an agreement in this regard.

Cancer is an insidious disease, alarmingly shaping the global health crisis as it claims millions of lives each year. Responsible for one in six deaths worldwide, cancer cases are projected to reach 26 million annually by 2030, with developing countries shouldering 75% of this burden.

Over 70% of cancer deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), where survival rates hover at just 30%. The reasons are manifold, including inadequate access to early detection and treatment services, lack of awareness, and societal taboos, to name a few.

In Pakistan alone, more than 185,000 new cases and more than 125,000 deaths are reported annually. Breast cancer is the most common, accounting for 16.5% of cases, followed by lip and oral cavity cancers (8.6%) and lung cancer (5.1%), according to Aga Khan University Hospital (AKUH).

“Roche Pakistan has proposed to the government many years ago that the cure for this cancer is only with them... and they want to do a partnership with the Government of Pakistan. They want to give 70% of the price of the medicine,”

Health Minister Mustafa Kamal said, adding the government would bear the rest of the 30% cost of treatment.

“And whoever is given this medicine should be given it free of cost.”

Kamal shared that cancer treatment in Pakistan costs around Rs9.8 million ($34,588) in five years on an average.

“[Most] people don’t have this (amount). So, this was a very important project,” he said.

Citing a World Health Organization (WHO) report, the health minister said millions of Pakistanis, who were not born poor, had fallen below the poverty line after falling sick.

“Houses were sold, plots were sold, jewelry was sold, everything was sold and illness made them poor,” he said, praising Roche Pakistan for its support.

Speaking at the agreement-signing ceremony, Roche Pakistan Managing Director Hafsa Shamsie called it “just the first step.”

“We will enhance the number of patients, we will enhance the disease areas, and God willing, we will go into other parts of the patient journey, like awareness and diagnosis,” she said.

Pakistan last year vaccinated over 10 million adolescent girls against a virus that causes cervical cancer as part of a continuing national campaign that has overcome early setbacks fueled by skeptics online.

Cervical cancer is the third most common cancer among Pakistani women after breast and ovarian cancers. Globally, it is the fourth most common. Each year, between 18,000 and 20,000 women in Pakistan die of the disease, according to health authorities.

The girls targeted in the initial campaign were in Punjab and Sindh provinces and in Azad Kashmir. The country plans to expand the coverage to additional areas by 2027, hoping to eliminate cervical cancer as a public health problem by 2030. It became the 149th country to add the HPV vaccine to its immunization schedule.