Pakistan postpones vaccine drive in province with highest number of cases this year

A health worker administers polio vaccine drops to a child during a vaccination campaign in Quetta, Pakistan, on October 24, 2022. (AFP/File)
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Updated 18 December 2024
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Pakistan postpones vaccine drive in province with highest number of cases this year

  • Of 63 cases confirmed in Pakistan this year, 26 are from southwestern Balochistan province
  • Pakistan has launched nationwide drive to vaccinate 44 million children from Dec. 16-22

QUETTA: Authorities in Pakistan’s Balochistan on Tuesday cited a lack of preparedness as they announced that a planned polio vaccine campaign in the province was being postponed until Dec. 30, a staggering blow for a region that has reported the highest number of cases of the crippling virus this year. 

Pakistan on Monday launched the latest nationwide drive to vaccinate 44 million children in 143 districts from Dec. 16-22 amid a surge in polio cases compared to previous years, with the 2024 tally reaching 63 last week.

In Balochistan province, which has reported the highest number of polio cases this year, 26, the anti-polio drive was first postponed by a day on Monday due to security reasons.

However, the campaign was not launched on Tuesday as planned, with the Provincial Emergency Operation Center (EOC) saying it would now start on Dec. 30 in all 36 districts of the remote, impoverished province that has for decades been plagued by an insurgency by separatist militants who frequently attack government officials, security forces and investment projects.

“The campaign will now start on December 30th,” the EOC said in a statement. “The latest nationwide anti-polio campaign in Balochistan has been postponed due to required preparations at the district level.”

Dr. Aftab Kakar, a senior health official in Quetta, said provincial authorities had decided to delay the vaccination drive due to a boycott by the Grand Health Alliance Balochistan, an umbrella organization representing health care workers in the province.

“Paramedical staff was involved with us [previously] … but we have prepared a new strategy now,” he told Arab News. “We won’t hire those paramedics who boycotted the latest anti-polio drive in Balochistan, and a decision has been made to hire private staff who will serve in the next campaign starting from Decc. 30.”

Jamal Shah, a representative of the alliance, said the paramedics had not boycotted the campaign but were registering their protest against the involvement of “medically unskilled” people locally hired by deputy commissioners to take part in the campaigns.

“Balochistan has the highest number of polio cases in Pakistan this year due to the participation of non-technical government staff in anti-polio campaigns,” he told Arab News. “Negligence of unskilled staffers defames the provincial health department.”

Polio is a paralyzing disease with no cure. Multiple doses of the oral polio vaccine and completion of the routine vaccination schedule for all children under the age of five are essential to provide high immunity against the virus.

Pakistan’s polio eradication efforts have faced several challenges in recent years, including militant attacks and misinformation spread by militants and conservative clerics.

Pakistan, along with neighboring Afghanistan, remains the last polio-endemic country in the world. In the early 1990s, the country reported around 20,000 cases annually but in 2018 the number dropped to eight cases. Six cases were reported in 2023 and only one in 2021.


Pakistan to begin first phase of Hajj 2026 trainings from today

Updated 31 December 2025
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Pakistan to begin first phase of Hajj 2026 trainings from today

  • Training programs to be held in phases across Pakistan till February, says religion ministry
  • Saudi Arabia allocated Pakistan a total quota of 179,210 pilgrims for Hajj 2026

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s religious affairs ministry has said that it will begin the first phase of mandatory Hajj 2026 training for pilgrims intending to perform the pilgrimage from today, Thursday.

The one-day Hajj training programs will be held in phases across the country at the tehsil level until February. The ministry directed intending pilgrims to bring their original identity cards and the computerized receipt of their Hajj application to attend the training sessions.

“Pilgrims should attend the one-day training program according to their scheduled date,” Pakistan’s Ministry of Religious Affairs (MoRA) said in a statement.

The ministry said training schedules are being shared through the government’s Pak Hajj 2026 mobile application as well as via SMS. It added that details of the schedule are also available on its website.

According to the ministry, training programs will be held in Abbottabad on Jan. 2; Ghotki, Thatta and Kotli on Jan. 3; and Tando Muhammad Khan and Khairpur on Jan. 4.

Hajj training sessions will be held in Rawalakot, Badin and Naushahro Feroze on Jan. 5, while pilgrims in Fateh Jang, Dadu and Tharparkar will receive the training on Jan. 6.

The ministry said training programs will be conducted in Umerkot and Larkana on Jan. 7, followed by sessions in Mirpurkhas, Shahdadkot and Mansehra on Jan. 8.

Pakistan’s religious affairs ministry has previously said these trainings will be conducted by experienced trainers and scholars using multimedia.

It said the training has been made mandatory to ensure that intending pilgrims are fully aware of Hajj rituals and administrative procedures.

Saudi Arabia has allocated Pakistan a quota of 179,210 pilgrims for Hajj 2026, of which around 118,000 seats have been reserved under the government scheme, while the remainder will be allocated to private tour operators.

Under Pakistan’s Hajj scheme, the estimated cost of the government package ranges from Rs1,150,000 to Rs1,250,000 ($4,049.93 to $4,236), subject to final agreements with service providers.