City
Epaper

Pakistan reports over 500 COVID-19 cases, 6 deaths in last 24 hrs

By ANI | Updated: January 1, 2022 19:05 IST

Pakistan on Saturday reported over 500 COVID-19 new cases for the second consecutive days and six deaths in the last 24 hours.

Open in App

Pakistan on Saturday reported over 500 COVID-19 new cases for the second consecutive days and six deaths in the last 24 hours.

According to the government's official COVID portal, Pakistan recorded a total of 556 new cases of coronavirus on Friday, whereas 6 more fatalities were recorded, reported The Express Tribune.

Pakistan has so far recorded a total of 1,295,933 cases of COVID-19 since the pandemic started. At least 28,933 people have succumbed to the infection

Meanwhile, Pakistan's COVID positivity rate has risen to 1.08 per cent, reported National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC).

Further, a 15-day micro-smart lockdown was imposed in block 7 of Karachi's Gulshan-e-Iqbal after the emergence of at least 12 cases of Omicron variant in the area, reported The Express Tribune.

"In exercise of powers conferred under Section 3 of the Sindh Epidemic Diseases Act 2014 (as amended in 2020), I, Taha Saleem, Deputy Commissioner District Karachi East hereby impose smart lockdown and micro-smart lockdown, which shall be enforced in the streets and houses of specified area respectively as given below, for a definite period of two weeks only," read the notification by the deputy commissioner's office.

After the imposition of the smart lockdown, there will be a ban on all sorts of public gatherings in the area, the notification said, adding that the government will strictly enforce the implementation of the SOPs, reported The Express Tribune.

"In order to reduce the transmission and spread of COVID-19, besides mandatory mask-wearing and social distancing interventions, it is also fundamental to ensure isolation, contact tracing and testing being the three pillars of TTT (TTQ) strategy of the government for the containment of Covid-19," the notification added.

According to the notification, the restrictions will remain in place till January 14 to avert a health crisis.

On Tuesday, the National Institute of Health confirmed 75 cases of the Omicron strain of COVID-19 across the country, reported The Express Tribune.

"Since the WHO (World Health Organisation) designated Omicron as a Variant of Concern on November 26, 2021, the Ministry of NHSRC (National Health Systems Resource Centre), NCOC, NIH (National Institute of Health) and the provincial health departments have remained vigilant to detect the variant in Pakistan," read an official statement.

"The first case of the Omicron variant of COVID-19 was reported on December 13 in Karachi. As of December 27, 2021, a total of 75 Omicron cases have been confirmed - 33 in Karachi, 17 in Islamabad and 13 in Lahore," it had added.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: KarachiislamabadExpress TribuneNcocTaha saleem
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalIslamabad Car Blast: At Least 12 Killed After Vehicle Explodes in G-11 Sector of Pakistan

EntertainmentPakistani Actress Humaira Asghar Dies At 32, Decomposed Body Found in Karachi Home by Local Police

InternationalSana Yousaf Murder: 17-Year-Old Pakistani TikToker Shot Dead in Islamabad Home

NationalBig Revelation on Operation Sindoor: Indian Air Force Struck Malir Cantt in Karachi

InternationalKarachi-Islamabad Connection Disturbed After INS Vikran Strikes Pakistan in Arabian Sea: Reports

International Realted Stories

International"Khaleda Zia a symbol of inclusiveness, democracy", says Bangladesh journalist

InternationalIsraeli Agency refutes claims made by Doctors Without Borders that it is prevented from providing aid in Gaza

InternationalIsrael sees 6.1% increase in Industrial Production

InternationalEarthquake of magnitude 4.3 strikes Indonesia

International"Whole nation remembers her with respect": Senior Expert on Khaleda Zia's death