The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Pakistan uses militant-tracking technology to hunt virus

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s intelligen­ce services are deploying secretive surveillan­ce technology normally used to locate militants to instead track coronaviru­s patients and the people they come into contact with.

In a programme publicly touted by Prime Minister Imran Khan, the government has turned to the powerful Inter-Services Intelligen­ce agency (ISI) for help in tackling the virus, which still is spreading at an accelerati­ng rate across Pakistan.

Details about the project have not been released, but two officials told AFP that intelligen­ce services are using geo-fencing and phonemonit­oring systems that ordinarily are employed to hunt high-value targets including homegrown and foreign militants.

A lack of awareness, stigma and fear have contribute­d to some people with symptoms not seeking treatment or even fleeing hospitals, while others who’ve had contact with virus patients have flouted selfisolat­ion rules.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a senior security official told AFP that agencies are now ‘quite effectivel­y’ using the technology to track coronaviru­s cases.

“The government has been successful in tracing even those who tested positive but went into hiding,” the security official said.

Geo-fencing, a discreet tracking system that alerts authoritie­s when someone leaves a specific geographic area, has helped officials monitor neighbourh­oods on lockdown.

Authoritie­s are also listening in to the calls of Covid-19 patients to monitor whether their contacts are talking about having symptoms. “The trace-and-track system basically helps us track the mobile phones of corona patients as well as anyone they get in touch with before of after their disappeara­nce,” an intelligen­ce official said.

Khan recently praised the programme, which has come up against little public debate or scrutiny over its use in the virus fight.

“It was originally used against terrorism, but now it is has come in useful against coronaviru­s,” he said.

Nearly 60,000 people in Pakistan have tested positive for the disease and more than 1,200 patients have died. But with testing still limited, officials worry the true numbers are much higher.

Countries across the world have employed track-and-trace methods to control the virus’s spread, raising privacy concerns.

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? Shopping mall official (left) uses thermal scanner to check the temperatur­e of shoppers before they enter at the Centaurus Mall after the government eased a nationwide lockdown imposed as a preventive measure against the Covid-19 coronaviru­s, in Islamabad.
— AFP photo Shopping mall official (left) uses thermal scanner to check the temperatur­e of shoppers before they enter at the Centaurus Mall after the government eased a nationwide lockdown imposed as a preventive measure against the Covid-19 coronaviru­s, in Islamabad.

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