Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa sets up isolation wards after authorities confirm two mpox cases

A poster indicating an isolation ward, prepared for mpox patients, is seen at the Police and Services hospital in Peshawar on August 20, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 25 August 2024
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Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa sets up isolation wards after authorities confirm two mpox cases

  • The two cases reported in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Mardan and Nowshera districts had a travel history
  • Official says they have toughened up screening at airports and border crossings to prevent virus spread

PESHAWAR: The health department in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province has set up isolation wards at several hospitals for patients with mpox symptoms, officials said on Sunday, days after authorities confirmed two cases in the region.
The mpox virus is primarily found in Central and West Africa, where it is transmitted from animals, such as rodents and primates, to humans. Human-to-human transmission can occur through direct contact with body fluids, respiratory droplets or contaminated materials like bedding. The disease is characterized by fever, swollen lymph nodes and a distinctive rash.
In the past week, health authorities confirmed two mpox cases in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, saying that both the patients had a travel history. One of the infected individuals belonged to the Mardan district and was isolated at home, while the other hailed from Nowshera and had been under treatment at the Police Service Hospital [PSH] for the last four days.
No one is allowed to go inside the isolation ward at the PSH, however, the hospital management granted special permission to Arab News to visit the ward, following standard operating procedures (SOPs).
“The patient admitted here right now is stable. He was screened from airport so [he] came to our hospital, our hospital is isolated for mpox disease,” Dr. Abrash Khan, medical officer at the PSH, told Arab News, without disclosing the identity of the person as per the protocols.
“He has no fever and he has no throat infection, but he has a rash on the body and that is the typical sign of mpox.”
Provincial authorities have been on an alert since KP reported two cases of the virus. Isolation wards have been established at various medical teaching institutes, including Lady Reading Hospital, Khyber Teaching Hospital, Hayatabad Medical Complex and Qazi Medical Complex, to prevent the disease’s spread.
“As per the capacity of each Medical Teaching Institute [MTI], isolation wards have been established,” KP health department spokesman Attaullah Khan told Arab News over the phone. “Isolation wards and beds have [also] been allocated for mpox patients at District Headquarter Hospitals [DHQs], including in merged or tribal districts.”
The health department spokesman said authorities had toughened up the screening process at airports and border crossings since the two infected individuals had a travel history.
“Screening has been going on 24/7 at the airports and border crossings,” he said. “More than 12,000 individuals have been scanned at the airport and more than 7,000 have been screened at the Torkham border crossing over one week.”


Pakistan offers Turkmenistan its Arabian Sea ports for wider access to ‘South Asia and beyond’

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Pakistan offers Turkmenistan its Arabian Sea ports for wider access to ‘South Asia and beyond’

  • PM Sharif meets Turkmen president in Ashgabat, calls for deeper trade and energy cooperation
  • Islamabad cites Karachi and Gwadar as key to boosting regional connectivity, including TAPI links

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Thursday urged Turkmenistan to expand trade and connectivity through Karachi and Gwadar, saying its Arabian Sea ports offer Turkmen businesses and exporters a direct route to South Asian and global markets, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s office said after high-level talks in Ashgabat.

Pakistan and Turkmenistan have long discussed regional transport corridors and energy cooperation, including the Turkmenistan–Afghanistan–Pakistan–India (TAPI) gas pipeline, a proposed multibillion-dollar project that would carry Turkmen natural gas south through Afghanistan into Pakistan and India. Islamabad has also pushed to link the landlocked Central Asian states to the sea by offering transit access through its deep-water ports, which sit at the crossroads of the Middle East, Central Asia and South Asia.

On Thursday, Pakistan's Sharif met Serdar Berdimuhamedov, the president of Turkmenistan, in Ashgabat as both countries look to revive momentum in bilateral engagement after years of regional instability. Pakistan has supported Turkmen neutrality policies at the United Nations, while Ashgabat has backed Pakistan during crises, including helping evacuate Pakistani nationals caught in Iran during the Iran–Israel conflict earlier this year.

“The Prime Minister reaffirmed Pakistan’s desire to enhance connectivity with Turkmenistan through land and sea routes and said that Karachi and Gwadar ports were ideally located to be utilized by the Turkmen side to enhance their outreach to South Asia and beyond,” Sharif’s office said in a statement.

Sharif reiterated his intention to deepen trade and economic ties with Turkmenistan, saying enhanced transport links and energy cooperation could anchor long-term regional integration. He invited President Berdimuhamedow and Turkmenistan’s national leader, Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow, on official visits to Pakistan next year.

Sharif is on a two-day visit to Turkmenistan for the International Forum on Peace and Trust, accompanied by Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar, Energy Minister Awais Leghari, Information Minister Attaullah Tarar and senior officials.

Turkmenistan’s president thanked Sharif for attending the UN-backed peace forum and said Ashgabat was keen to expand cooperation across multiple sectors, according to the statement.