Eastern Eye (UK)

Pakistan makes progress on vaccines as cases soar

NEED FOR CERTIFICAT­ES BY WORKERS PROMPTS A RISE IN JAB UPTAKE

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PAKISTAN hit a target on Tuesday (3) to vaccinate one million people a day against Covid-19, making strides in its inoculatio­n campaign just weeks away from a deadline for workers in public-facing roles to obtain vaccinatio­n certificat­es.

The government announced last week that from the end of this month that workers in schools, shopping malls and hospitalit­y businesses, and the transport and air travel industries would be barred from entering public offices unless they had a certificat­e.

“Happy to report that the target we had set for one million vaccinatio­ns in a day was crossed,” Asad Umar, the minister in charge for Covid-19 operations, said in a tweet.

Pakistan has seen soaring coronaviru­s infections, fuelled by the highly transmissi­ble Delta variant, putting its poor health infrastruc­ture under extreme pressure.

Out of a population of 220 million, more than 31 million have received one vaccine shot, but only 6.7 million have been fully vaccinated, according to the National Command and Operations Centre (NCOC), a military run body that oversees the Covid-19 operations.

It said on Tuesday that Pakistan registered 3,582 new cases and 67 deaths in the past 24 hours, with more than 3,300 people in critical condition. So far 23,529 people have died of Covid-19 in Pakistan, with over one million infections.

Officials say more than 70 per cent of new cases are Delta variant infections.

After a sluggish start to the inoculatio­n campaign, the new requiremen­t for certificat­es of vaccinatio­n has led to a rush of people seeking shots, with queues stretching over a kilometre outside some vaccinatio­n centres, notably in Karachi, the capital of Sindh province.

The provincial government in Sindh has put extra pressure on people to get vaccinated, warning that it would withhold the salaries of government servants and block people’s cell phone SIM cards unless they had the required certificat­es.

Around 23 per cent of people being tested for Covid-19 in Karachi during recent days were found to have the virus, while nationwide the positive test rate stood just over seven per cent, according to the NCOC.

Karachi imposed a week-long partial lockdown last Saturday (31) to curb the spread of the Delta variant, as the city’s hospitals are close to saturation levels, the provincial chief minister said last Friday (30).

“I know, people will not be comfortabl­e with lockdown, but it is inevitable we have to bring the numbers down,” Murad Ali Shah, chief minister of Sindh province, told a press conference.

According to Aga Khan University Hospital, there is almost 100 per cent prevalence of the Delta variant in the city, the chief executive of the province said.

He said Karachi was seeing 20 per cent cases for the past few weeks, but following the Muslim holiday of Eid, the virus also spread in rural areas, with numbers have gone up to six per cent from two per cent, as people visited hometowns.

The lockdown will be in place until August 9 and will focus the retail industry in the city. Essential services will be open.

 ??  ?? ANGER: Hotel and restaurant
workers march to protest the government’s Covid lockdown and demand their right to work,
in Karachi on Monday (2)
ANGER: Hotel and restaurant workers march to protest the government’s Covid lockdown and demand their right to work, in Karachi on Monday (2)

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