Pakistan launches first HPV vaccination drive to curb cervical cancer deaths

Pakistan launches first HPV vaccination drive to curb cervical cancer deaths
A girl receives the Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine at the launch of the campaign, in Karachi, Pakistan, on September 15, 2025. (Handout/Government of Sindh)
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Updated 42 sec ago

Pakistan launches first HPV vaccination drive to curb cervical cancer deaths

Pakistan launches first HPV vaccination drive to curb cervical cancer deaths
  • Human Papillomavirus, spread through sexual contact, is a virus that can cause cancers
  • Pakistan to vaccinate girls aged 9-14 from Sept. 15-27 in Sindh, Punjab, Azad Kashmir, Islamabad

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Health Minister Mustafa Kamal launched the country’s first Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination campaign on Monday, state media reported, which will run from Sept. 15-27 and aim to protect millions from cervical cancer.

HPV is a very common virus that can cause cancers later in life, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Medical experts recommend protecting children from these cancers through the HPV vaccine.

The HPV vaccine series, as per the CDC, is most effective when given before a person is exposed to the virus. It is a very common virus that is spread through sexual contact and can live in the skin for many years without causing symptoms. In some cases, HPV can cause genital warts or cervical cancer.

“Minister for National Health Services Mustafa Kamal launched HPV vaccination campaign today,” state broadcaster Radio Pakistan reported, adding that girls aged 9-14 years old will be given the vaccine.

According to the Federal Directorate of Immunization, Pakistan will hold the vaccination campaign from Sept. 15-27 in schools, religious seminaries and health facilities across Punjab, Sindh, Azad Jammu and Kashmir, and Islamabad.

Kamal stressed that over 5,000 women are diagnosed with cervical cancer in Pakistan each year, adding that approximately 3,500 of them lose their lives to the disease. The minister called on parents to ensure their daughters are vaccinated, emphasizing the importance of prevention to protect girls.

In 2025, UNICEF together with partners GAVI, the Vaccine Alliance and the World Health Organization, said it will support Pakistan to introduce the HPV vaccine to help protect millions of adolescent girls from cervical cancer.

It cited myths and taboos as one of the greatest challenges to HPV vaccine acceptance in Pakistan. These myths, it said, included ones that claimed vaccines cause infertility and another that the HPV vaccine is only for sexually active girls.


Pakistan sends 22nd aid consignment to Gaza amid worsening food crisis

Pakistan sends 22nd aid consignment to Gaza amid worsening food crisis
Updated 58 min 53 sec ago

Pakistan sends 22nd aid consignment to Gaza amid worsening food crisis

Pakistan sends 22nd aid consignment to Gaza amid worsening food crisis
  • Consignment weighs 100 tons, contains flour, rice, cooking oil, chickpeas and ready-to-eat meals and canned fruit
  • Pakistan has sent 2,127 tons of aid in total to Gaza through 22nd consignments, says disaster management authority

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan dispatched its 22nd consignment of relief items for the war-struck people of Gaza on Monday, the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) said as Islamabad reaffirmed its solidarity with Palestine amid Israel’s intense bombardment of the territory. 

The consignment was sent via a special flight from Lahore’s Allama Iqbal International Airport in the presence of NDMA and government officials, including Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz. The consignment, weighing 100 tons, was sent in collaboration with Pakistani charity Alkhidmat Foundation. 

The NDMA said the aid consignment comprised ration bags containing flour, rice, cooking oil, chickpeas, ready-to-eat meals and canned fruit. The authority said Pakistan has in total sent 22 aid consignments weighing 2,127 tons to Gaza. 

“The hearts of the people of Pakistan beat with the people of Palestine,” Nawaz was quoted as saying by the NDMA. “Every sensitive soul is deeply disturbed by the atrocities against the innocent Muslims of Gaza.”
Pakistan sent the latest consignment amid fears of starvation in Gaza, as Israel continues with its military operations in the territory. 

The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, a global hunger monitor, warned last month that northern Gaza is suffering from famine, which is projected to spread to central and southern areas of the territory by the end of September.

Pakistan does not recognize nor have diplomatic relations with Israel. Islamabad calls for an independent Palestinian state based on “internationally agreed parameters” and the pre-1967 borders, with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital.
Since the beginning of Israel’s war on Gaza in October 2023, Pakistan has repeatedly raised the issue of Palestinian deaths in Gaza at the United Nations, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation and other multilateral platforms.

Israel’s military campaign has killed more than 65,000 Palestinians in Gaza, most of them civilians, since October 2023, as per figures from the Gaza Health Ministry.

Islamabad has also been pushing the international community to force Israel to allow uninterrupted access to humanitarian supplies for the people of Gaza. 


Pakistan buys 100,000 tons of sugar, tenders again for 100,000 tons

Pakistan buys 100,000 tons of sugar, tenders again for 100,000 tons
Updated 15 September 2025

Pakistan buys 100,000 tons of sugar, tenders again for 100,000 tons

Pakistan buys 100,000 tons of sugar, tenders again for 100,000 tons
  • Move follows last week’s purchase of 100,000 tons of medium-grade sugar
  • Pakistan has approved the import of 500,000 tons of sugar to stabilize prices

HAMBURG: Pakistan’s state agency the Trading Corporation of Pakistan (TCP) has issued a new international tender to purchase 100,000 metric tons of white refined sugar and is believed to have bought 100,000 tons in a tender last week, European traders said on Monday.

The deadline for submission of price offers in the new tender is September 23.

Traders said the new announcement followed a purchase last week of about 100,000 tons of medium grade sugar in a previous tender made at an estimated $560 a ton cost and freight included (c&f). Trading house Bare was believed to be the seller.

Reports reflect assessments from traders and further estimates of prices and volumes are still possible later.

Pakistan’s government has approved plans to import 500,000 tons of sugar to help maintain price stability after retail sugar prices in the country rose sharply.

The TCP has held a series of sugar tenders in July, August and September. Traders estimate that around 235,000 tons have been bought in the recent tenders including last week’s purchase.

The TCP’s latest tender seeks price offers for fine, small and medium-grade sugar, with shipment arranged to achieve arrival of all the sugar by Nov. 7.

The sugar for the new tender can be sourced from any worldwide origin excluding India and Israel or other sanctioned countries. 


Flood survivors begin to return home in Pakistan's eastern Punjab as water recedes

Flood survivors begin to return home in Pakistan's eastern Punjab as water recedes
Updated 15 September 2025

Flood survivors begin to return home in Pakistan's eastern Punjab as water recedes

Flood survivors begin to return home in Pakistan's eastern Punjab as water recedes
  • Swollen rivers in Pakistan’s Punjab displace over 2.5 million, killed 104 during weeks of monsoon deluges
  • Punjab carried out one of its largest rescue, relief operations with provincial teams helped by the military

MULTAN, Pakistan: Displaced families began returning home as floodwaters significantly receded across much of Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province, where swollen rivers displaced more than 2.5 million people and killed about 100 during weeks of monsoon deluges, officials said Monday.

Photos and videos posted on social media show lush fields that once swayed with crops are now only sand and silt. Returning residents said they will have to replant while rebuilding their homes.

Floodwater levels are decreasing at Panjnad, where the Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Beas and Sutlej rivers all converge before flowing into the Indus, said Irfan Ali Kathia, the authority’s director general.

Rescue and relief operations in some districts are ongoing, officials said.

Nargis Bibi, 46, from a village in Kasur district, said the Sutlej river swept into her village home, forcing her to flee with her husband, daughter and two sons.

“We waded through 5 to 6 feet of water to reach a safe place, but the flood came so suddenly that we couldn’t take even a needle with us,” she said. “When we returned, everything was destroyed.”

Muhammad Sajjad, a 43-year-old farmer from an orchard-owning family, said floodwaters from the Chenab river had receded by about 6 feet near Multan, allowing his family to return home.

More than 4,500 villages in Punjab were inundated during weeks of torrential rains and repeated water releases from overflowing dams in neighboring India, according to the Punjab Disaster Management Authority.

The flow of water in the Ravi and Chenab rivers has returned to normal and levels on the Sutlej river is falling, the agency said.

India shared at least six flood alerts with Pakistan in recent weeks and the water releases swelled rivers in Punjab, causing significant damage, according to Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority.

The agency directed returning residents to follow instructions from local administrators so they can receive government assistance or stay in camps if their villages remain unsafe.

The flooding would not have been as severe if India had released water from its dams gradually, Pakistani officials said.

The floodwaters are moving south toward Pakistan’s Sindh province, which bore the brunt of Pakistan’s catastrophic 2022 floods that killed more than 1,700 people nationwide.

Punjab carried out one of its largest rescue and relief operations with provincial teams assisted by the military, Kathia said.

Stranded families in the remote villages of Liaquatpur and Jalalpur Pirwala continue to receive aid. Many displaced residents have returned to their homes in Narowal, Okara, Kasur, Bahawalpur and Bahawalnagar, Kathia said.

More than 950 people have died nationwide in flooding since late June.


Pakistan begins anti-polio drive to vaccinate 1.29 million children in militancy-hit KP province

Pakistan begins anti-polio drive to vaccinate 1.29 million children in militancy-hit KP province
Updated 15 September 2025

Pakistan begins anti-polio drive to vaccinate 1.29 million children in militancy-hit KP province

Pakistan begins anti-polio drive to vaccinate 1.29 million children in militancy-hit KP province
  • Three-day campaign to be held in Bannu, Lakki Marwat, Dera Ismail Khan, Tank, South Waziristan and Upper Dir districts
  • Pakistan has deployed 11,000 security personnel to provide security to polio workers during the campaign, says official

PESHAWAR: Pakistani health authorities on Monday kicked off a targeted anti-polio vaccination drive in specific districts of the militancy-hit northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, an official confirmed, saying the campaign aims to inoculate 1.29 million children. 

Pakistan last week said it had inoculated over 19 million children nationwide during a polio vaccination campaign. The vaccination drive is part of Islamabad’s efforts to stem the spread of the disease, which is an incurable, highly infectious virus that can cause lifelong paralysis and can only be prevented through repeated oral vaccination and routine immunization.

The latest polio vaccination campaign in KP will take place from Sept. 15-18, Amjad Ali, a provincial spokesman for the polio eradication program, confirmed in a statement. He said the seven districts that will be targeted in the vaccination campaign are Bannu, Lakki Marwat, Dera Ismail Khan, Tank, Lower South Waziristan, Upper South Waziristan and Upper Dir. 

“Polio drops will also be administered in selected areas of Bajaur and Swat districts,” Ali said in a statement.

“For this phase of the campaign, 8,928 trained polio worker teams have been formed.”

The spokesperson said that approximately 11,000 security personnel have been deployed to ensure the safety of polio teams.

Pakistan’s efforts to eliminate poliovirus have been hampered by parental refusals, widespread misinformation and repeated attacks on 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 during these campaigns.

Pakistan and Afghanistan remain the only two countries were the disease remains endemic. Pakistan recorded 74 cases in 2024, a sharp rise from six in 2023 and just one in 2021.

Pakistan’s KP province, which borders Afghanistan, has seen a rise in militant attacks since November 2022, when the state’s truce with the Pakistani Taliban or Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) broke down. The TTP has carried out some of the deadliest attacks against law enforcers and citizens in Pakistan to enforce their strict brand of Islamic law in the country. 

Lakki Marwat, Bannu, Waziristan and Dir districts have seen violent attacks by militants in the past. Pakistan’s military last week confirmed 19 soldiers had been killed in KP in separate clashes with militants. 


Pakistan coach disappointed India did not shake hands at Asia Cup

Pakistan coach disappointed India did not shake hands at Asia Cup
Updated 37 min 23 sec ago

Pakistan coach disappointed India did not shake hands at Asia Cup

Pakistan coach disappointed India did not shake hands at Asia Cup
  • India won by seven wickets in first match between two sides after Pakistan, India’s military clash in May
  • Captains of both teams did not shake hands at the toss while players also refrained from doing so at end

DUBAI: Pakistan head coach Mike Hesson said they were disappointed by India’s decision not to shake hands after Sunday’s politically-charged Asia Cup match between the bitter neighbors.

India won the Group A encounter by seven wickets in the first cricket match between the sides since a four-day military conflict between the nuclear-armed neighbors in May.

While the match itself passed without incident, there was no shaking of hands between the captains at the toss or among the players at the end.

“We were ready to shake hands at the end of the game, we obviously are disappointed that our opposition didn’t do that,” Hesson told reporters.

“We sort of went over there to shake hands and they’d already gone into the changing room.

“That was a disappointing way for the match to finish, and a match we were disappointed for the way we played, but we were certainly willing to shake hands.”

Pakistan captain Salman Agha did not attend the presentation ceremony, which New Zealander Hesson said was a “follow-on effect” of India’s refusal to shake hands.

India captain Suryakumar Yadav dedicated their victory to their armed forces at the ceremony, and expressed solidarity with the victims of the April 22 attack in Indian Kashmir which triggered the conflict.

In the post-match press conference, Suryakumar said the players were aligned with the Indian cricket board and government.

“We took a call (on not shaking hands). We came here to just play the game. We have given a proper reply,” said the batter.

Bilateral cricket between India and Pakistan remains suspended since 2013 and the arch-rivals play each other only in multi-team tournaments.

Sunday’s match went ahead despite calls in India for the team to boycott it.

India could face Pakistan twice more at the tournament, including in the September 28 final should the teams advance that far.