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Pakistan’s national polio campaign vaccinates over 25 million children in first two days

Pakistan’s national polio campaign vaccinates over 25 million children in first two days
A health worker administers polio drops to a child for vaccination on the first day of a nationwide week-long poliovirus eradication campaign in Karachi on October 13, 2025. (AFP/File)
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Pakistan’s national polio campaign vaccinates over 25 million children in first two days

Pakistan’s national polio campaign vaccinates over 25 million children in first two days
  • More than 25.4 million children under five vaccinated across Pakistan in first two days of national drive
  • Health officials say goal is to reach over 45 million children by end of the week-long campaign

KARACHI: Pakistan’s nationwide polio immunization campaign continued successfully for a third consecutive day on Wednesday, with more than 25.4 million children under the age of five vaccinated in the first two days, according to the National Emergency Operations Center (NEOC).

The week-long campaign, launched earlier this week, aims to reach over 45 million children across all provinces and territories as part of Pakistan’s ongoing efforts to eradicate the paralytic disease. Pakistan remains one of only two countries in the world where wild poliovirus is still endemic, alongside Afghanistan.

According to the NEOC, 14.3 million children have been vaccinated in Punjab province, 5.02 million in Sindh, 3.77 million in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, and 1.45 million in Balochistan. In Islamabad, health workers reached over 203,000 children, while 187,000 were vaccinated in Gilgit-Baltistan and 481,000 in Azad Jammu and Kashmir.

“Integrated and sustained efforts are underway to ensure that every eligible child receives the life-saving vaccine,” the NEOC said in a statement. It added that teams are going door-to-door and setting up transit vaccination points nationwide.

The NEOC urged parents to welcome vaccination teams and ensure that all children under five receive the drops, warning that polio “is a dangerous disease that can cause lifelong paralysis.” It emphasized that the campaign’s success depends on active community participation and parental cooperation.

While Pakistan has made major gains since the 1990s when annual cases exceeded 20,000, reducing the toll to eight by 2018, vaccine hesitancy, fueled by misinformation and resistance from some religious hard-liners, continues to undermine efforts.

Pakistan recorded 74 cases in 2024, a sharp rise from six in 2023 and just one in 2021. This year, it has reported 29 polio cases so far, including 18 from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, nine from Sindh and one each from Punjab and Gilgit-Baltistan.

Polio is a highly infectious and incurable disease that can cause lifelong paralysis. The only effective protection is through repeated doses of the Oral Polio Vaccine for every child under five during each campaign, alongside timely completion of all routine immunizations.

Pakistan’s efforts to eliminate poliovirus have been hampered by parental refusals, widespread misinformation and repeated attacks on anti-polio workers by militant groups. In remote and volatile areas, vaccination teams often operate under police protection, though security personnel themselves have also been targeted and killed in attacks.

On Tuesday, a paramilitary Levies soldier deployed to protect a polio vaccination team was killed in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.


Pakistan military says it repelled Afghan Taliban attacks near border

Pakistan military says it repelled Afghan Taliban attacks near border
Updated 20 sec ago

Pakistan military says it repelled Afghan Taliban attacks near border

Pakistan military says it repelled Afghan Taliban attacks near border
  • Pakistani military says militants destroyed Pak-Afghan Friendship Gate and targeted divided villages along border
  • Clashes follow weekend fighting that left at least 23 Pakistani troops dead and Afghan side claiming 58 Pakistani soldiers killed

PESHAWAR: Pakistan’s military said on Wednesday its forces had repelled coordinated attacks by Afghan Taliban fighters at multiple points along their shared border in the Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces, accusing Kabul’s forces of destroying a key trade gate and endangering civilians.

The clashes came days after some of the heaviest cross-border fighting in recent years, in which Pakistan said 23 of its soldiers were killed while Afghan authorities claimed to have killed 58 Pakistani troops. The escalation has strained already frayed ties, coming as Afghanistan’s foreign minister visited archrival India. Pakistan views New Delhi’s growing influence in Afghanistan as a regional security threat, given their own long-standing rivalry.

Relations between Islamabad and Kabul have deteriorated sharply since 2021, when the Taliban returned to power in Afghanistan. Hopes for cooperation soon gave way to distrust as cross-border militancy surged, particularly in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

Pakistan says the Afghan Taliban are sheltering fighters from the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and allowing them to stage cross-border attacks from Afghanistan. Kabul denies the allegation, saying it does not permit its territory to be used against other countries.

“The Afghan Taliban resorted to cowardly attack at four locations in Spin Boldak area of Balochistan. The attack was effectively repulsed by Pakistani Forces,” the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the military’s media wing, said in a statement. 

It said militants destroyed the Pak-Afghan Friendship Gate on their side, a symbolic port of entry infrastructure built to facilitate bilateral trade and regulated crossings, undermining formal border control, and launched assaults that penetrated villages split by the frontier, disregarding civilian safety.

The military said the attacks were coordinated with members of “Fitna Al-Khawarij,” a term Pakistan uses for militants linked to the TTP and which Pakistan says are backed by Afghanistan and India. Both deny the charge. 

The ISPR said 15–20 Afghan Taliban fighters were killed in Spin Boldak and another 25–30 in Kurram district, where Pakistani troops destroyed eight Taliban posts and six tanks in what it called a “proportionate response.”

Earlier on Wednesday, the Kabul government said 15 civilians were killed and dozens wounded in fresh clashes on the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

“The insinuations that the attack was initiated by Pakistan are outrageous and blatant lies, just like the claims of capturing Pakistani posts or equipment,” the ISPR said, calling Taliban statements “propaganda … debunked with basic fact checks.” 

It added: “The Armed Forces stand resolute and fully prepared to defend the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Pakistan. All acts of aggression against Pakistan will be responded to with full force.”

Cross-border trade remained suspended on Wednesday as officials on both sides confirmed military reinforcements had been deployed around Chaman and Spin Boldak. 

Tensions between the two nations have also worsened since 2023 when Pakistan began deporting hundreds of thousands of undocumented Afghans, a move it said was necessary to curb terrorism and smuggling. By 2025, more than 800,000 Afghans had been repatriated or forced out, according to government figures.

India’s deepening engagement with the Taliban, including reopening its Kabul embassy last week, has further heightened Islamabad’s concerns. 

Regional powers, including Ƶ, have called for restraint and renewed dialogue to prevent the escalating hostilities from destabilizing South Asia.


Afghan officials say 15 civilians killed in fresh Pakistan border clashes

Afghan officials say 15 civilians killed in fresh Pakistan border clashes
Updated 15 October 2025

Afghan officials say 15 civilians killed in fresh Pakistan border clashes

Afghan officials say 15 civilians killed in fresh Pakistan border clashes
  • Clashes broke out overnight in the southern Afghan district of Spin Boldak, according to local information department
  • Pakistan did not immediately comment, but security sources said they had targeted Afghan positions from Kurram district

SPIN BOLDAK, Afghanistan: Fifteen civilians were killed and dozens wounded in fresh clashes on the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan, Afghan officials told AFP on Wednesday.

Clashes broke out overnight in the southern Afghan district of Spin Boldak, according to Ali Mohammad Haqmal, spokesman for the local information department, who said 15 civilians had been killed.

The toll was confirmed to AFP by Abdul Jan Barak, an official at the Spin Boldak district hospital, who said more than 80 women and children had been wounded.

Taliban government spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid accused Pakistani forces of “once again” carrying out attacks “with light and heavy weapons” in Spin Boldak district.

Mujahid said in a statement that 12 civilians were killed and 100 others injured. The statement did not mention any casualties among security forces.

But it did say calm had returned to the area after Pakistani soldiers were killed and posts and weapons seized.

All businesses in the area are closed and many residents have fled, an AFP correspondent reported.

Pakistan did not immediately comment, but security sources said they had targeted Afghan positions from Kurram district, further north than Spin Boldak.

The renewed violence comes as tensions, fueled by security issues, flare between the two neighboring countries, with Islamabad accusing Afghanistan of harboring militant groups led by the Pakistani Taliban (TTP). Kabul denies this. 

Clashes first erupted on Saturday evening when Kabul launched an operation in at least five provinces along the border.

The Taliban government said it attacked Pakistani security forces in “retaliation for air strikes carried out by the Pakistani army on Kabul,” following unclaimed blasts in the Afghan capital on Thursday.

Islamabad vowed a forceful response on Sunday, and dozens of casualties were reported on both sides.


Pakistan military warns India against ‘provocative propaganda’ ahead of state polls

Pakistan military warns India against ‘provocative propaganda’ ahead of state polls
Updated 15 October 2025

Pakistan military warns India against ‘provocative propaganda’ ahead of state polls

Pakistan military warns India against ‘provocative propaganda’ ahead of state polls
  • ISPR says Indian commanders issuing ‘irresponsible’ pre-election statements
  • Five months after May war, Pakistan cautions against jingoism escalating tensions

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s military on Wednesday accused India’s armed forces of reviving “delusional, fabricated and provocative propaganda” ahead of state elections, warning that chest-thumping by a nuclear-armed military could stoke a cycle of jingoism and destabilize South Asia.

The statement comes five months after the May 2025 India-Pakistan conflict, termed “Marka-e-Haq” (“Battle of Truth”) by Pakistan’s military, which saw the two nations exchange artillery, missile and drone strikes before a US-brokered ceasefire was announced on May 10. The calm has largely held since the truce.

On Wednesday the military’s media wing, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), alleged Indian military leaders have resumed pre-election rhetoric in the run-up to Bihar assembly polls scheduled for Nov. 6 and 11, 2025, and West Bengal’s assembly elections due in 2026. ISPR said such statements were being issued “under immense political pressure.”

Indian political and security rhetoric in recent months has included public statements blaming Pakistan for supporting terrorism in Kashmir, claims that Pakistani forces plan incursions ahead of India’s elections and assertions of “bloodshed” narratives designed to rally domestic political support. 

“Any professional soldier would know that unnecessary chest-thumping and unwarranted statements might initiate a cycle of jingoism and lead to serious consequences for peace and stability in South Asia,” ISPR said.

“Every act of aggression will be dealt with a swift, resolute and intense response that will be remembered by posterity.”

The military said it viewed with “grave concern” what it called repeat pre-poll narratives from India and described them as attempts to “mold history” with “Bollywood-style scripts.”

The heaviest fighting in decades between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan was sparked by an April 22 attack in Indian-administered Kashmir that killed 26 people, most of them tourists. New Delhi blamed the incident on “terrorists” backed by Pakistan, a charge denied by Islamabad.

On May 7, Indian jets bombed what New Delhi called “terrorist infrastructure” sites across the border. Pakistan has said it downed six Indian planes, including at least three Rafale fighters, in the initial clashes. Islamabad has denied it suffered any losses of planes but has acknowledged its air bases suffered some hits although losses were minimal.

Pakistan and India have been at loggerheads since their independence from British colonial rule in 1947 and both claim the disputed Kashmir region in full but rule it in part. 


Pakistan, Saudi Fund for Development reaffirm strategic economic partnership

Pakistan, Saudi Fund for Development reaffirm strategic economic partnership
Updated 15 October 2025

Pakistan, Saudi Fund for Development reaffirm strategic economic partnership

Pakistan, Saudi Fund for Development reaffirm strategic economic partnership
  • SFD has financed about $1.2 billion in Pakistan projects and over $533 million in grants since 1976
  • Ƶ remains Pakistan’s top remittance source with about 2.64 million Pakistani workers

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb this week met the CEO of the Saudi Fund for Development (SFD) to reaffirm Pakistan’s strategic partnership with the Kingdom as Islamabad seeks to deepen ties with one of its most important development and financing partners amid a renewed push to attract investment and support reforms.

Ƶ has long been a pillar of Pakistan’s external financing and household income mix. SFD says it has financed more than 18 development projects and programs worth about $1.2 billion, alongside over $533 million in grants since 1976. 

“Senator Aurangzeb also met H.E. Sultan Abdulrahman Al-Marshad ... where he reaffirmed the strategic partnership between Pakistan and the Kingdom of Ƶ,” the finance division said in a statement after the meeting between the Pakistani finance minister and SFD CEO.

The meeting formed part of the finance minister’s broader Washington schedule on the sidelines of the IMF–World Bank Annual Meetings, where Pakistan has pressed its case for investment, climate-resilient development, and support for a reform program aimed at stabilizing growth and strengthening the external account.

Aurangzeb’s discussion with Al-Marshad also covered infrastructure priorities, notably the M-6 highway and the ML-1 railway line upgrade, as well as skills development and digital infrastructure, areas aligned with Pakistan’s broader push to improve logistics, productivity and public service delivery. SFD, for its part, has highlighted ongoing health, hydropower and transport initiatives in Pakistan and notes that in 2024 it signed 17 loan agreements worth SR3.7 billion (approximately $985 million) across 13 countries, signaling continued capacity to support partner economies.

The meeting underscores a decades-long relationship that blends development lending with short-term balance-of-payments support. SFD notes cumulative Pakistan operations spanning social infrastructure, transport, energy, water and sanitation. The Kingdom has also supported Pakistan with a $3 billion State Bank deposit, repeatedly rolled over, most recently in December 2024, and deferred oil payments of about $1.2 billion under a facility agreed in February 2025 to ease near-term pressures.

Meanwhile, about 2.64 million Pakistanis live and work in Ƶ, and the Kingdom is the largest single source of workers’ remittances to Pakistan. 

According to the State Bank of Pakistan, remittances from Ƶ totaled around $737 million in August 2025 and $751 million in September 2025, the highest among all source countries. 


China rejects link between new rare earth export curbs and US-Pakistan cooperation

China rejects link between new rare earth export curbs and US-Pakistan cooperation
Updated 15 October 2025

China rejects link between new rare earth export curbs and US-Pakistan cooperation

China rejects link between new rare earth export curbs and US-Pakistan cooperation
  • Beijing says export control changes are lawful and “have nothing to do with Pakistan”
  • Claims that Pakistan shipped rare earth minerals to US described as “misinformed or invented”

ISLAMABAD: China this week denied that its new export control moves on rare earth technologies are a retaliation for alleged Pakistani-US cooperation in the sector, calling recent media claims “baseless.”

Over the past several weeks, Pakistan has reportedly dispatched its first batch of rare earth elements and critical minerals to the United States under a newly signed $500 million cooperation framework, sparking speculation that Beijing might respond. 

The rare earth sector has assumed strategic importance globally, with countries seeking to reduce dependence on China, which refines the majority of the world’s rare earth supplies and has recently tightened export rules affecting minerals and technologies used in semiconductors and defense. 

At a regular press briefing in Beijing, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Lin Jian emphasized China’s “all-weather strategic cooperative” relationship with Pakistan, saying bilateral trust remains high and denying any impact on that bond.

“China’s recently released export control measures on related rare earth items have nothing to do with Pakistan,” Lin said.
“The samples that the Pakistani leaders showed and gave to the US leader are gem ores purchased by staff in Pakistan.”

China’s new rules expand licensing and export restrictions on certain rare earths, technologies and processing equipment, measures Beijing says are necessary to safeguard national security and fulfill international non-proliferation obligations. 

Lin termed the news reports that Pakistan used Chinese mining technology to send rare earth materials to the United States as “misinformed or invented, or even designed to drive a wedge between China and Pakistan.”

He added that Islamabad had assured Beijing that its US engagements would not undermine Chinese interests.

“Pakistan stressed that its interactions with the US will never harm China’s interests or its cooperation with China,” Lin said.