Pakistan begins talks with Saudi delegation on local vaccine manufacturing

Pakistan begins talks with a high-level Saudi delegation in Islamabad on February 3, 2026, to explore local vaccine manufacturing. (Mustafa Kamal/X)
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Updated 03 February 2026
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Pakistan begins talks with Saudi delegation on local vaccine manufacturing

  • Health ministry has warned vaccine import costs could rise from $400 million to $1.2 billion by 2031
  • Local vaccine manufacturing would strengthen health security and help conserve foreign exchange 

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Tuesday formally began discussions with a high-level Saudi delegation on establishing local vaccine manufacturing, as Islamabad seeks to reduce import dependence and prepare for the eventual end of international funding support for its national immunization program.

The talks come amid Pakistan’s broader push to strengthen health security and industrial capacity. The country of more than 240 million people currently imports all vaccines used in its national immunization campaigns, relying heavily on international partners to help cover costs.

Officials say local vaccine manufacturing would not only strengthen health security but also help conserve foreign exchange and support Pakistan’s longer-term economic stability as the country looks to cut costly imports and build export-oriented industrial capacity.

According to the Ministry of National Health Services, the eleven-member Saudi delegation is led by Nizar Al-Hariri, senior adviser to Saudi Arabia’s minister of industry, and is visiting Pakistan as part of efforts to deepen bilateral cooperation in health, pharmaceutical manufacturing and industrial collaboration.

“Practical progress is being made toward the local production of vaccines for 13 diseases in Pakistan,” the health ministry said in a statement, quoting Federal Health Minister Syed Mustafa Kamal who met the delegation in Islamabad.

Pakistani officials presented detailed briefings on current vaccine demand, existing infrastructure and production capacity.

“Collaboration between Pakistan and Saudi Arabia in the health sector will set an example for the entire region,” the ministry said.

Kamal told the visiting delegation Pakistan is the world’s fifth most populous country, with around 6.2 million children born each year, adding that the country’s annual population growth is roughly equivalent to the population of New Zealand. 

He said the government currently provides vaccines for 13 diseases free of cost but does not manufacture any of them domestically, forcing Pakistan to import vaccines at an annual cost of about $400 million.

According to the ministry, international partners currently cover 49 percent of those costs, with the remainder borne by the Pakistani government. However, Kamal warned that this external support is expected to end after 2031.

“If vaccines are not manufactured locally, the annual cost could rise to $1.2 billion by 2031, which would place a heavy burden on the national economy,” the ministry quoted him as saying.

Pakistan regularly conducts nationwide immunization campaigns against diseases including polio, measles, rubella and hepatitis. This week, it launched a seven-day polio vaccination drive aimed at inoculating more than 45 million children.


Pakistan working to repatriate 15 sailors from Iran’s Bandar Abbas amid regional conflict

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Pakistan working to repatriate 15 sailors from Iran’s Bandar Abbas amid regional conflict

  • Pakistan’s envoy to Tehran says mission working to repatriate the sailors within a day
  • Stranded sailors circulated video saying they were advised to move to a safer location

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s envoy to Iran said on Tuesday the country was working to repatriate 15 Pakistani sailors from Iran’s Bandar Abbas port, as regional tensions escalate due to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. 

Ambassador Muhammad Mudassir Tipu said the Pakistani mission was in contact with the crew, their families and their parent company in Pakistan after a video circulating online showed a seafarer appealing for assistance.

“We are in contact with our sailors (15 in number) who are on a ship in Bandar Abbas,” Tipu wrote on X. “We are in contact with their families as well as their parent company in Pakistan. We are making every possible effort for their repatriation to Pakistan. It will hopefully be done by today or at most tomorrow.”

In a video shared earlier in the day, a man identifying himself as Mujtaba Ali from Mardan said he was working on a merchant navy vessel docked in the key port city of Bandar Abbas and that the crew had been advised to move to a safer location.

Pakistan has urged de-escalation in the region and has previously advised its nationals to remain in contact with diplomatic missions during periods of instability.
The ambassador did not specify the mechanism for the sailors’ evacuation but said efforts were underway to secure their safe return home.