Pakistan hopes US immigrant visa processing will resume after policy review

Passengers arrive at the immigration counter before boarding their Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) flight to Paris at the Islamabad International Airport on January 10, 2025. (AFP/File)
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Updated 15 January 2026
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Pakistan hopes US immigrant visa processing will resume after policy review

  • State Department has suspended issuance of immigrant visas for nationals of 75 countries from Jan. 21
  • Pakistan says trade with Iran complies with international law as US announces additional 25 percent tariff

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan said on Thursday it was in contact with US authorities and hoped routine visa processing would resume after Washington completes an internal review of its immigration system that has led to a pause in immigrant visa issuances for several countries, including Pakistan.

The US State Department said on Wednesday it would suspend the issuance of immigrant visas for nationals of 75 countries, including Pakistan, from Jan. 21, as President Donald Trump presses ahead with a hard-line immigration agenda centered on financial self-sufficiency.

In an update published on its website, the State Department said it was conducting a comprehensive review of immigration policies to ensure that migrants from what it described as “high-risk” countries do not rely on public welfare in the United States or become a “public charge.”

Pakistan’s Foreign Office said it had taken note of the announcement and was in contact with US authorities to seek clarification on the scope and duration of the move.

“We are in touch with the US authorities to ascertain further details. This is an evolving news that we are following. We understand that this is an internal ongoing process of review of US immigration policies and system,” Foreign Office spokesperson Tahir Andrabi said.

The spokesperson added that Pakistan viewed the development as part of an internal US policy review and expressed hope that routine visa processing would resume once the review is completed.

Andrabi also addressed Washington’s decision that any country that does business with Iran will face a tariff rate of 25 percent on any trade with the US, as Washington weighs a response to the situation in Iran which is seeing its biggest anti-government protests in years.

“This is, again, an evolving story. Pakistan has the trade that takes place between Pakistan and other countries, follows international trade regulations and, of course, international law relevant to those trades,” he said.

He added that Pakistan had taken note of the US announcement and would continue engagement with Washington.

“We will work with the US authorities. Pakistan has had very positive trade in those years with the US and we look forward to culmination of those talks and a mutually beneficial agreement on trade with the US side.” 

During the course of his second term in office, Trump has often threatened and imposed tariffs on other countries over their ties with US adversaries and over trade policies that he has described as unfair to Washington.

Trump’s trade policy is under legal pressure as the US Supreme Court is considering striking down a broad swathe of Trump’s existing tariffs.

Iran exported products to 147 trading partners in 2022, according to World Bank’s most recent data.


Pakistan vaccinates over 42 million children during first anti-polio drive this year

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Pakistan vaccinates over 42 million children during first anti-polio drive this year

  • Last year, Pakistan reported 31 polio cases, a significant drop from 74 cases in 2024
  • Authorities appeal to parents to ensure all children below five years are vaccinated

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani health authorities have vaccinated more than 42 million children in an ongoing anti-polio drive this week, the National Emergency Operations Center (NEOC) said on Friday.

Polio is a highly infectious and incurable disease that can cause lifelong paralysis. The only effective protection is through repeated vaccination for every child under five.

Pakistan and Afghanistan are the only two countries in the world where polio remains endemic. Last year, Pakistan reported 31 polio cases, a significant drop from 74 cases in 2024.

Authorities on Feb. 2 began the first anti-polio drive of this year which will continue till Feb. 8 and aims to reach 45.4 million children, aged below five, across the South Asian country.

“The first national polio campaign of 2026 continues for the fifth day across the country,” the NEOC said on Friday. “Vaccination of more than 42.2 million children across the country has been completed in four days.”

Of these 42.2 million, more than 22.4 million children have been vaccinated in Punjab, 9.585 million in Sindh, 6.764 million in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and over 2 million children have been inoculated in Balochistan.

It said more than 454,000 children were vaccinated in the federal capital of Islamabad, 261,000 in Gilgit-Baltistan and over 673,000 in Azad Kashmir.

“More than 400,000 polio workers are going door to door to administer polio drops to children,” the NEOC statement read. “Parents and communities are appealed to cooperate fully with polio workers.”

Another campaign is being simultaneously run in Afghanistan, according to the NEOC.

Pakistan reported six cases in 2023 and only one in 2021, but the country saw a sharp resurgence in 2024.

Pakistan’s polio program began in 1994, but efforts to eradicate the virus have been repeatedly undermined by vaccine misinformation and resistance from some religious hard-liners who claim that immunization is a foreign plot to sterilize Muslim children or a cover for Western espionage.

Militant groups have also frequently targeted polio vaccination teams and the security personnel assigned to protect them, often resulting in deadly at