Pakistani student with cerebral palsy wins gold medal, highlights barriers facing people with disabilities

Maaz Majid (third from right), Gold Medalist in Master's in Special Education, receives degree from Vice Chancellor Allama Iqbal Open University, Dr. Nasir Mahmood (right), during the AIOU Convocation 2025 in Islamabad, Pakistan, on November 12, 2025. (Photo Courtesy: AIOU)
Short Url
Updated 18 January 2026
Follow

Pakistani student with cerebral palsy wins gold medal, highlights barriers facing people with disabilities

  • Pakistan has a population of 7.4 million persons with disabilities, official data states, who face barriers to economic and social opportunities
  • An overwhelming majority of special education institutes are critically understaffed, lack non-teaching support personnel and essential specialists

TALAGANG: Maaz bin Majid walked toward his laptop in his bedroom in the eastern city of Talagang, moving slowly as he navigated the usual stiffness in his muscles. He turned it on and began surfing websites for scholarship opportunities to continue his studies.

Born with cerebral palsy, a neurological condition affecting muscle coordination and movement, the 25-year-old earned the gold medal in his master’s degree in Special Education from Allama Iqbal Open University (AIOU).

The news of his winning the gold medal came as a “shock” to both Majid and his mother, Nighat Malik, after the university informed them of his achievement.

“For three days, I was in complete shock,” Majid told Arab News. “When a person has a problem and he suddenly finds out that he is getting a gold medal.”




Maaz Majid shows the gold medal he received for Master's in Special Education, from Allama Iqbal Open University, in Talagang, Pakistan, on December 10, 2025. (AN photo)

According to the 2023 census, Pakistan has 7.4 million persons with disabilities, though independent organizations say the number is likely higher. They often face barriers in education, economic participation, legal recognition, and access to clinical resources.

In Islamabad, there are 73,022 persons with disabilities, including 6,304 school-age children. Yet only 1,900 students are enrolled across five public-sector special education institutes, a mere 30 percent.

The education ministry, which took charge of these institutes from the Ministry of Human Rights in June 2024, reports that 85.7 percent are critically understaffed, 100 percent lack non-teaching support personnel, and 85.7 percent lack essential specialists such as psychologists, speech therapists, and audiologists.

The federal government claims it is addressing these gaps. Contracts have been awarded for upgrades to special education institutions in Islamabad. A project to equip university students with special needs has been added to the Public Sector Development Programme (PSDP) for 2025-26.

“It’s a Rs1.8 billion [$6.4 million] project where electric wheelchairs, computers with braille technology, and other assistive devices will be provided to students in various universities across Pakistan,” Federal Secretary of Education Nadeem Mahbub told Arab News.




Maaz Majid, Gold Medalist in Master's in Special Education, works on his laptop at his home in Talagang, Pakistan, on December 10, 2025. (AN photo)

Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous province, is home to 1.73 million children with disabilities, aged 5 to 17. According to “Pakistan Education Statistics,” a 2023-24 report by the federal education ministry, Punjab operates 293 special education institutes serving 38,478 students. In contrast, Sindh enrolls 4,283 students across 65 institutes, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) serves 432 students in three institutes, and Balochistan has 891 students across 16 facilities.

Dr. Hina Noor, head of AIOU’s Special Education Department, acknowledged Punjab’s relative progress compared to other provinces.

“They (KP, Sindh and Balochistan) have not been able to do as much progress as Punjab has done,” she said.

In its 2021-22 report, the federal education ministry noted that Punjab allocates the highest budget and share for special education, followed by other provinces.

While it indicates recognition of the importance of special education in the country’s most populous province, the infrastructure gap extends beyond the school level.

A recent survey by Dr. Noor’s department found that across all of Punjab, only a little over 100 students with special needs are enrolled in higher education programs.

In 2021, Pakistan’s Higher Education Commission introduced a policy requiring universities to reserve at least one seat for students with disabilities.

“With these directives, accessibility and enrollment will increase in the future,” Dr. Noor said, stressing that teachers need training to educate students with disabilities, using adapted methods rather than the same curriculum applied to all students.

‘PROBLEM WITH MYSELF’

Malik knows the stigma attached to her son’s condition. When she first took Majid to a private hospital in Islamabad, a doctor said he would “never be able to do anything,” suggesting that at best he might learn to care for himself. The mother paused treatment for six months but later sought a second opinion in Lahore, where doctors reassured her that physiotherapy could help him improve significantly.

Watching her son navigate a system not designed for him, Malik pursued a master’s degree in Special Education and is now a principal at a government-run school in Chakwal where she applies those lessons to help other families.

“I wanted to tell [others] how difficult it is for parents to have a special child,” she said.




Maaz Majid, Gold Medalist in Master's in Special Education (right) poses for a group photo with his father Malik Majid Jahangir (center) at his home in Talagang, Pakistan, on December 10, 2025. (AN)

Majid was first enrolled in a mainstream school in Talagang, where the administration and fellow students facilitated his early education. But during 10th grade, a medical treatment intended to improve his condition backfired dramatically, according to his mother.

He spent weeks recovering, struggling to speak or perform basic daily activities. The medical treatment eventually restored his mobility and speech, but the aftermath left his facial muscles weakened and his writing ability severely compromised.

Malik said her son, who required scribes to write in examinations and relied on the AIOU’s distance learning program to avoid the challenges of regular travel after intermediate, had a relentless study routine: waking up early, studying throughout the day, with no time for entertainment.

For Majid, choosing the same field as his mother came from first-hand experience of the challenges.

“Because I have a problem with myself, I thought that I should do something for other special kids as well,” he added.


Pakistan urges OIC states to build self-reliant vaccine manufacturing ecosystem

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan urges OIC states to build self-reliant vaccine manufacturing ecosystem

  • Islamabad underscores vulnerabilities in antigen production, technology access, regulatory maturity and supply chain within OIC region
  • Vaccines are public goods that are central to health security, equity and sustainable development, minister tells OIC vaccine manufacturers

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Tuesday urged the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) member states to strengthen collaboration to build a self-reliant vaccine manufacturing ecosystem, the Pakistani information ministry said, citing the country’s state minister for health.

Pakistan, like many OIC countries, imports vaccines used in major immunization campaigns at an annual cost of about $400 million, according to Health Minister Mustafa Kamal. This is despite its heavy reliance on international partners that bear 49 percent of total costs.

Officials say global vaccine manufacturing remains highly concentrated, with more than 70 percent of vaccines produced in fewer than ten countries, which leaves many low- and middle-income countries dependent on external suppliers.

Pakistani State Minister for Health Dr. Mukhtar Ahmad Malik on Tuesday addressed a meeting of the OIC vaccine manufacturers group in Islamabad, wherein he stressed that vaccines are essential public goods and central to health security, equity and sustainable development.

“He highlighted persistent vulnerabilities in antigen production, technology access, regulatory maturity, and supply chain resilience, particularly within the OIC region,” the Pakistani information ministry said, after the meeting at the OIC’s Ministerial Standing Committee on Scientific and Technological Cooperation (COMSTECH) Secretariat in Islamabad.

“Malik called for an implementation-focused roadmap with clear timelines and shared responsibility, urging OIC Member States to strengthen collaboration to build a resilient, self-reliant, and future-ready vaccine manufacturing ecosystem.”

The development comes days after Federal Health Minister Kamal told Arab News that Pakistan is “very close” to reaching an agreement with Saudi Arabia that would enable Islamabad to manufacture vaccines locally, saying production could begin within the next three years.

Kamal warned that external support for Pakistan, which currently provides vaccines for 13 diseases free of cost, was expected to end after 2030.

Malik acknowledged existing vaccine manufacturing capacity in countries such as Indonesia, Türkiye, Iran and Egypt, but stressed that capacity across the OIC remains fragmented and requires coordinated action.

He underscored the importance of assessing manufacturing capacity, regulatory readiness and demand across OIC member states to enabling evidence-based collaboration, technology transfer and targeted investment.

“[In Pakistan,] vaccine manufacturing has been declared a strategic national priority, supported by a National Vaccine Policy, regulatory strengthening, fiscal incentives, Special Economic Zones and long-term public procurement commitments,” the minister was quoted as saying.

He also highlighted Pakistan’s focus on public-private partnerships, government-to-government (G2G) and business-to-business (B2B) cooperation and proposed initiatives such as a National Vaccine Fund and National Vaccine Alliance to mobilize investment and de-risk projects.

“The Asian Development Bank has conditionally expressed readiness to provide [Pakistan] up to USD 250 million in soft financing for viable vaccine manufacturing projects,” Malik told participants.