WHO urges Pakistan to lock down as COVID-19 cases rise sharply

World Wednesday 10/June/2020 16:20 PM
By: Times News Service
WHO urges Pakistan to lock down as COVID-19 cases rise sharply

ISLAMABAD: The World Health Organization (WHO) has recommended the health authorities of Pakistan to adopt the "two weeks off and two weeks on" lockdown strategy to curb the spread of COVID-19 as confirmed cases and deaths are rising sharply in the country, local media reported on Wednesday.

In letters sent by the WHO on Tuesday to health authorities of Pakistan's eastern Punjab and southern Sindh provinces, the two worst-hit areas in the country by the coronavirus, the WHO recommended two weeks of opening businesses and two weeks of strict lockdown, according to the reports.

The Pakistani government started to ease the lockdown from May 9, aiming at mitigating the influence on the labor class and the poor in the country. The WHO said that after the relaxation of the lockdown, the rate of spread of COVID-19 increased in Pakistan, adding that the country doesn't meet any prerequisite for lifting lockdown restrictions, according to the reports.

The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Pakistan has risen to 113,702 with 2,255 deaths, according to the data updated by the country's health ministry Wednesday.

A total of 5,385 new cases and 83 deaths were reported during the last 24 hours. Punjab is the worst hit with 43,460 confirmed cases, followed by Sindh where 41,303 cases were reported.

Commenting on the recommendation of the WHO to impose a two-week complete lockdown, Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on Health Zafar Mirza said Wednesday that the government was pursuing a holistic strategy to combat the coronavirus.

"We have to make tough policy choices to strike a balance between lives and livelihoods," Mirza said, adding that the government is focused on enforcement of standard operating procedures in shops, mosques and public transport and other crowded areas while easing lockdown restrictions.