ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan tested positive for COVID-19 yesterday, officials said, just two days after he received his first vaccination against the disease. The 68-year-old former top cricketer received a shot of the Chinese-produced Sinopharm vaccine on Thursday, as the country battles a third wave of the virus.
"At this point, the prime minister's office can only confirm that the honorable prime minister has tested positive for COVID-19 and has self-isolated," his office said. Khan was suffering from a mild cough and a mild fever, his spokesman Shahbaz Gill later added, saying the positive test was performed yesterday.
His aides were quick to put distance between the diagnosis and his first jab of the two-dose vaccine. "Please do not link it to the corona vaccine. Immunity develops a few weeks after the vaccine is given. Make sure to vaccinate your elders and loved ones. Be careful," Gill added. Khan was probably infected before he got the vaccine shot, during a series of public engagements this week, information minister Shibli Faraz told the Geo News television channel.
Earlier yesterday, the leader's adviser on health Faisal Sultan said the increase in positive virus cases over the past few days was "alarming". He said there was a "quite visible" burden on the healthcare system, particularly in the country's most populous province of Punjab. Case numbers began to rise again in recent weeks, soon after the UK variant was first reported in Karachi in late December.
More than 620,000 cases and nearly 13,800 deaths have been reported since the pandemic reached the country, but limited testing suggests true figures are probably much higher. Impoverished Pakistan has largely avoided the major lockdowns seen in other countries, instead opting for "smart" lockdown policies which see neighborhoods closed off for short periods, as well restrictions on indoor dining and large gatherings.
However, many guidelines have been ignored, with Sultan criticizing "a lack of administrative action and a lack of public compliance". Beijing has donated one million vaccine doses to Pakistan, which the country of more than 220 million has begun administering to health workers and people over 65. Soon after the pandemic started, Khan told the nation in an address not to panic, saying "97 percent of patients fully recover", but he chided citizens just months later, warning: "People are not taking it seriously."
Meanwhile, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi wished Khan a "speedy recovery" from COVID-19 yesterday, in a new sign of a thaw between the neighbors. Since agreeing to halt hostilities on their disputed Kashmir border last month, the nuclear-armed rivals have shown signs of wanting to improve relations.
Modi used the announcement that Khan had tested positive for the coronavirus to make his gesture. "Best wishes to Prime Minister Imran Khan for a speedy recovery from COVID-19," the Hindu nationalist leader said on Twitter. Modi regularly uses his rallies to lash out at Pakistan.
The two countries - which fought intense artillery battles on their Kashmir border last year - have had three wars since their angry split after independence in 1947. But the surprise accord reaffirming a 2003 ceasefire came amid reports that officials from the two sides had held secret meetings in recent months.
There have been no reported shellings on the Kashmir Line of Control, as the disputed frontier is known, since the accord came into effect on Feb 24. Khan has since called for increased trade with India, while Pakistan's army chief General Qamar Javed said last week that the neighbors should "bury the past". - AFP