Gulf News

Are numbers telling the true story?

SCEPTICISM REMAINS AMID FEWER TESTS; NCOC MARKS 100 DAYS OF BATTLE AGAINST THE VIRUS

- ISLAMABAD BY ZUBAIR QURESHI Correspond­ent

Although the number of coronaviru­s cases in Pakistan has jumped to 225,290, yet the government is confident it will handle the pandemic and the number will decline in July and August.

From an informal chat with various ministers and even through their media talks, one gets the impression as if Pakistan had achieved success against coronaviru­s and the route back to normality is only a matter of days.

However, according to independen­t public health experts, it is not clear whether these promising figures are because of the smart lockdown and other measures taken by the government or due to plunge in number of daily tests.

Cause for alarm

Pakistan is conducting less than 25,000 Covid-19 tests on daily basis while a fortnight ago, the number of daily tests was 30,000-35,000.

According to the health ministry’s website, the tally of daily cases has declined from earlier figures of 4,000-5,000 to 3,0004,000. Yesterday, the number of cases in last 24 hours was reported at 3,387 while 68 deaths were caused during this period.

The National Command & Operation Centre (NCOC) on Saturday

marked 100 days of battle against coronaviru­s and Minister for Special Initiative­s Asad Umar on this occasion paid rich tributes to the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), provincial government­s, police and law-enforcemen­t agencies for their day-and-night efforts against the virus and for ensuing effective coordinati­on among department­s.

It is because of their coordinate­d efforts, today, recoveries have outnumbere­d the active cases, he said. According to the NCOC, 125,094 people have recovered across Pakistan, while the number of active cases is 95,570. “Our frontline health workers, doctors, nurses, and medical staff are our heroes, said he adding the government was making all out efforts to ensure that both — fight against coronaviru­s and normal course of life — went side by side,” he said. He, however, cautioned against the violation of Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) against Covid-19, as it could result in recurrence of coronaviru­s.

Collective sacrifice urged

Meanwhile, prominent clerics and noted scholars of the country have advised the people to prefer collective sacrifices to individual rituals this Eid Al Adha.

The moon-sighting committee’s chairman, Mufti Munibur-Rehman, along with other ulema and clerics has given a set of standard operating procedures (SOPs) which, he claims, has been agreed on by all the clerics of all schools of thought and the Sindh government.

He appealed to the people and the provincial administra­tion to cooperate.

 ?? AFP ?? Policemen put barbed wire as an market area is sealed in Rawalpindi. Pakistan is conducting less than 25,000 Covid-19 tests daily while a fortnight ago, the number was 30,000-35,000.
AFP Policemen put barbed wire as an market area is sealed in Rawalpindi. Pakistan is conducting less than 25,000 Covid-19 tests daily while a fortnight ago, the number was 30,000-35,000.
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