Pakistan to hold five-day anti-polio drive in its northwest starting Apr. 21

Pakistan to hold five-day anti-polio drive in its northwest starting Apr. 21
A health worker (R) administers polio drops to a child on the first day of a nationwide polio vaccination campaign, in Karachi on February 3, 2025. (AFP/File)
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Updated 08 April 2025
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Pakistan to hold five-day anti-polio drive in its northwest starting Apr. 21

Pakistan to hold five-day anti-polio drive in its northwest starting Apr. 21
  • Pakistan has reported six polio cases in the first three months of 2025
  • The latest drive aims to vaccinate over 6 million children in the region

ISLAMABAD: A five-day polio eradication campaign will begin in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province from Apr. 21, Pakistani state media reported on Tuesday, with the drive aimed at vaccinating over 6 million children in the region.
Polio is a paralyzing disease with no cure and multiple doses of the oral polio vaccine, along with completing the routine vaccination schedule for children under five, are essential to provide immunity against the virus.
Pakistan, which has reported six polio cases so far in 2025, planned three major polio campaigns in the first half of 2025, with rounds scheduled for April and May, the Associated Press of Pakistan news agency reported, citing authorities.
“A five-day polio eradication campaign is set to be launched in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa from Apr. 21,” the report read. “According to the provincial health department, more than 800,000 children in the capital city of Peshawar will receive the polio vaccine.”
Over 30,000 teams were formed to participate in the campaign whereas 50,000 police personnel will also be deployed for security purposes, the state news agency reported.
Pakistan’s polio program, launched in 1994, has faced significant challenges, including vaccine misinformation and opposition from some religious hard-liners who claim immunization is a foreign plot to sterilize Muslim children or a cover for Western espionage. Militant groups also frequently attack and kill members of polio vaccination teams.
Last year, Pakistan reported 74 polio cases. Pakistan and Afghanistan are the last two countries where polio remains endemic.


Pakistan tells OIC envoy Kashmiris expect Muslim world’s support in struggle for freedom

Pakistan tells OIC envoy Kashmiris expect Muslim world’s support in struggle for freedom
Updated 25 sec ago
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Pakistan tells OIC envoy Kashmiris expect Muslim world’s support in struggle for freedom

Pakistan tells OIC envoy Kashmiris expect Muslim world’s support in struggle for freedom
  • Ambassador Yousef M. Al Dobeay visited Pakistan and met with officials from April 19 to 22
  • Foreign office says he was briefed about rights violations against Kashmiris under Indian rule

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan informed a visiting Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) official this week the people of Indian-administered Kashmir have high expectations from the Muslim world and the 57-member bloc in their struggle for fundamental rights and freedoms under Indian rule, the foreign ministry said on Thursday.

The statement came a day after India announced a series of retaliatory measures against Pakistan following a deadly militant attack in Kashmir that killed 26 people at a tourist resort.

According to the foreign office, OIC Secretary General’s Special Envoy for Jammu and Kashmir, Ambassador Yousef M. Al Dobeay, visited Pakistan from April 19 to 22, during which he held meetings with Pakistani officials.

“The Special Envoy was apprised of the systematic human rights violations in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) and the destabilizing impact of India’s belligerent rhetoric and retrogressive actions,” the foreign office said.

“It was underscored that the Kashmiris placed their trust in the OIC and the Muslim Ummah for proactive assistance in realization of their fundamental rights and freedoms, and the peaceful resolution of the Jammu and Kashmir dispute in accordance with the relevant UN Security Council resolutions,” it added.

Ambassador Al Dobeay emphasized that Palestine and Jammu and Kashmir remained foremost priorities on the OIC’s agenda and discussed ways to alleviate the sufferings of the Kashmiri people.

This was Ambassador Al Dobeay’s fifth visit to Pakistan and Azad Jammu and Kashmir since his appointment as the OIC Secretary General’s Special Envoy for Jammu and Kashmir.

India suspended the Indus Waters Treaty, closed the only land border crossing at Attari, expelled Pakistani defense attachés at its high commission in New Delhi and reduced its own diplomatic staff in Islamabad.

The attack, claimed by the “Kashmir Resistance” group, is said to be the worst on civilians in India in nearly two decades.


Pakistan seeks fresh bids for PIA stake sale by June 3

Pakistan seeks fresh bids for PIA stake sale by June 3
Updated 37 min 59 sec ago
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Pakistan seeks fresh bids for PIA stake sale by June 3

Pakistan seeks fresh bids for PIA stake sale by June 3
  • The government aims to sell as much as 100 percent shares of the airline after a failed attempt last year
  • It may offer incentives like tax exemption on aircrafts purchase and liability transfers to attract investors

KARACHI: The government on Thursday invited expressions of interest from potential bidders by June 3 to sell its stake in Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), in line with the International Monetary Fund’s requirement to privatize loss-making state-owned enterprises (SOEs), according to a notice on the privatization ministry’s website.
The fresh bids have been called a week after the Privatization Commission Board on April 17 approved pre-qualification criteria for selecting prospective buyers for the divestment of the government’s 51 to 100 percent shares in Pakistan International Airlines Corporation Ltd. (PIACL).
“In the last financial year (FY24), PIA served approximately 4 million passengers across 30 destinations, carrying out 268 flights per week,” the ministry said in the notice aimed at attracting investors.
This marks Pakistan’s second attempt to raise funds through the privatization of the national carrier, which earlier this month reported its first operational profit of $33.48 million in over two decades.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s previous attempt to offload a 60 percent stake in the airline failed last year, attracting only a single bid from a real estate firm that quoted well below the asking price of over $300 million.
In a bid to avoid a repeat, the government said it may offer prequalified bidders incentives such as exemption from sales tax on the induction of aircraft through lease or purchase and additional support to improve PIA’s balance sheet, including indemnification, transfer of certain liabilities and coverage for tax and legal claims, according to the notice.
Pakistan, which has repaid most of its $26 billion in external debt this year through an IMF loan and billions of dollars in rollovers from allies such as China, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, had to shift nearly all of PIA’s legacy debt to the government’s books after bidder concerns derailed the previous privatization attempt.
The cash-strapped South Asian nation also plans to privatize PIA’s Roosevelt Hotel Corporation in New York.
The privatization board last week finalized its recommendations on the transaction structure, which will be presented to the Cabinet Committee on Privatization for approval.
The ministry added that demand in Pakistan’s under-served aviation market is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate of around 6.2 percent over the next four years through FY29.
 


Pakistan’s bonds dive as tensions rise with India

Pakistan’s bonds dive as tensions rise with India
Updated 40 min 57 sec ago
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Pakistan’s bonds dive as tensions rise with India

Pakistan’s bonds dive as tensions rise with India
  • The 2036 maturity fell the most, shedding over 4 cents to be bid at 74 cents on the dollar
  • Tensions escalate with India following worst attack on civilians in Indian-administered Kashmir in years

LONDON: Pakistan’s dollar-denominated government bonds dropped more than 4 cents on Thursday, Tradeweb data showed, as tensions with neighboring India escalated.

The 2036 maturity fell the most, shedding over 4 cents to be bid at 74 cents on the dollar.

Gunmen on Tuesday killed 26 people in Indian Kashmir, the worst attack on civilians in the country in nearly two decades.

Indian police on Thursday said two of the three suspected militants “involved in” the attack were Pakistani nationals, and the country suspended the Indus Waters Treaty, a move Pakistan called an act of “water warfare.” 


Pakistan and India hold high-level huddles as ties plummet following deadly attack

Pakistan and India hold high-level huddles as ties plummet following deadly attack
Updated 24 April 2025
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Pakistan and India hold high-level huddles as ties plummet following deadly attack

Pakistan and India hold high-level huddles as ties plummet following deadly attack
  • Gunmen killed 26 men at tourist site in Pahalgam area of Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir on Tuesday
  • India alleges cross-border involvement, suspends water treaty, closes only land crossing between the neighbors

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan convened a meeting of its National Security Committee (NSC) while Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has called for a meeting with all opposition parties on Thursday, as relations between the nuclear-armed rivals plummeted following a deadly militant attack in Kashmir.

On Tuesday, gunmen killed 26 men at a tourist site in the Pahalgam area of Indian-administered Kashmir in the worst attack on civilians in the country in nearly two decades. Speaking to media on Wednesday evening, Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri said there was cross-border involvement in the attack and New Delhi would suspend a six-decade-old river-sharing treaty as well as close the only land crossing between the neighbors.

India would also pull out its defense attaches in Pakistan and reduce staff size at its mission in Islamabad to 30 from 55, Misri said.

India has summoned the top diplomat in the Pakistan embassy in New Delhi, Indian media reported on Thursday, to give notice that all defense advisers in the Pakistani mission were persona non grata and given a week to leave, one of the measures Misri announced on Wednesday.

A man jogs past policemen standing outside the gate of Pakistan High Commission in New Delhi, India, on April 24, 2025. (REUTERS)

In Islamabad, a meeting of the National Security Committee began on Thursday afternoon to finalize the country’s response to New Delhi’s escalatory actions.

“The meeting will be attended by senior civil and military leadership to deliberate upon internal and external situation arising after the Pahalgam false flag operation,” state-run Radio Pakistan reported, implying that the attack was committed by India itself with the intent of disguising the actual source of responsibility and pinning blame on Islamabad. 

Ahead of the meeting, Pakistan denounced India’s suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty as an act of “water warfare,” with Pakistan’s Power Minister Awais Leghari writing on X:

“Every drop is ours by right, and we will defend it with full force — legally, politically and globally.”

The Indus water treaty, mediated by the World Bank and signed in 1960, split the Indus River and its tributaries between the neighbors and regulated the sharing of water. It had withstood two wars between the neighbors since then and severe strains in ties at other times. 

The treaty is critical for Pakistan, a lower-riparian state whose food security and agricultural productivity depend on consistent access to these waters, especially as the country faces worsening climate vulnerability and erratic monsoon cycles.

“ENDS OF THE EARTH

Diplomatic relations between neighboring Pakistan and India were weak even before the latest measures were announced as Pakistan had expelled India’s envoy and not posted its own ambassador in New Delhi after India revoked the semi-autonomous status of Kashmir in 2019.

India and Pakistan control separate parts of Kashmir and both claim it in full.

India has often accused Pakistan of involvement in an insurgency in Kashmir, but Islamabad says it only offers diplomatic and moral support to Kashmiris in their struggle for self-determination.

Tens of thousands of people have been killed in Kashmir since the uprising began in 1989, but it has tapered off in recent years and tourism has surged in the scenic region.

Police in India’s Kashmir published notices on Thursday naming three suspected militants “involved in” Tuesday’s attack and announced rewards for information leading to their arrest.

Two of the three suspected militants are Pakistani nationals, the notices said.

Modi, in his first speech since the attack in the Himalayan region, vowed on Thursday to punish all those responsible.

“I say to the whole world: India will identify, track and punish every terrorist and their backer,” the Indian prime minister said. “We will pursue them to the ends of the Earth.”

– With inputs from Reuters


Punjab to track listed extremists with GPS devices amid rising militant violence in Pakistan

Punjab to track listed extremists with GPS devices amid rising militant violence in Pakistan
Updated 24 April 2025
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Punjab to track listed extremists with GPS devices amid rising militant violence in Pakistan

Punjab to track listed extremists with GPS devices amid rising militant violence in Pakistan
  • The province’s home department has approved the deployment of 1,500 tracking devices in the first phase
  • The decision will help enable round-the-clock surveillance of Fourth Schedule individuals with tracking bands

ISLAMABAD: Amid an uptick in militant attacks in Pakistan, authorities in Punjab have approved the use of electronic tracking devices to monitor individuals listed under the country’s Fourth Schedule as security risks, the provincial home department said on Thursday.
The Fourth Schedule of Pakistan’s Anti-Terrorism Act includes the names of individuals suspected of involvement in militant or sectarian violence. Those placed on the list are subjected to intense scrutiny and movement restrictions.
Under the new policy, GPS-enabled tracking bands will be attached to these individuals, allowing round-the-clock monitoring of their movements.
“This is a major decision aimed at enhancing surveillance using globally recognized practices,” the Punjab Home Department said in a statement, adding that new devices equipped with advanced micro-tracking chips would also be imported.
The devices will be distributed among the province’s key security agencies, including the Counter Terrorism Department (CTD), Crime Control Department and the Parole Department.
According to the statement, a high-level meeting chaired by Punjab Home Secretary Noor-ul-Amin Mengal approved the deployment of 1,500 tracking devices in the first phase.
Of these, 900 will be allocated to the CTD, 500 to the Crime Control Department and 100 to the Parole Department.
The decision follows expert recommendations advocating continuous surveillance of high-risk individuals and the adoption of internationally accepted tools for law enforcement and counterterrorism.
The development comes amid a surge in militant attacks in Pakistan. While such violence has largely remained confined to the two western provinces bordering Afghanistan, Punjab, the country’s most populous region, also remains vulnerable, with militants in the past targeting cities like Lahore and Rawalpindi.