ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday said the coronavirus situation in the country is “under control” amid fears of a new omicron subvariant driving infections in the South Asian country.
The overall coronavirus positivity ratio in Pakistan has remained below one percent since last July. Pakistan credits the low rate of COVID-19 cases to its vaccination campaign. According to official data, more than 132 million people, who constitute over 90 percent of its eligible population for vaccination, have gotten the jab.
Pakistan reported only 15 positive cases of coronavirus in the last 24 hours, at a positivity ratio of 0.40 percent, according to the National Institute of Health, Pakistan.
However, Pakistani officials told Arab News on Monday they had not let their guard down despite the low number of COVID-19 cases and have started screening international travelers since the emergence of a new omicron sub-variant in China known as BF.7.
The new variant has also been detected in Germany, Belgium, France, Denmark and the United States. Pakistani officials have directed airport health services to isolate potential COVID-19 cases as part of its effective control and prevention measures against the infection.
“By the grace of Allah, the COVID-19 situation in Pakistan is under control,” a statement from the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) quoted Sharif as saying. The prime minister was chairing a meeting held to take stock of the coronavirus situation in Pakistan.
Officials told the prime minister that Pakistan was not under threat from the new variant as 90 percent of the country’s population, eligible for vaccination had been fully vaccinated. Officials told him that 95 percent of the eligible population had been partially vaccinated.
Sharif noted that Pakistan had not reported a single death from the infection in 15 weeks. “The low rate of coronavirus infection is a welcome [development] but we must be prepared at all times,” he said.
Officials informed the prime minister that of the 35 million population of children aged between 5-12 years, 25 percent had been vaccinated.
“We must ensure 100 percent vaccination of the 5-12-year age group on an emergency basis,” the prime minister instructed authorities. “Screening at Pakistan’s borders and airports must be made even more effective,” he added.
Sharif appreciated Pakistan’s pandemic response body, the National Command and Operation Center (NCOC) for its efforts to tackle coronavirus in the country, according to the PMO.
Pakistan’s health ministry spokesperson told Arab News on Monday the vaccination centers established during the peak of the pandemic were still working in all cities and people could get the required vaccination and booster shots from there.