What's new

'Held like prisoners at Taftan': Pilgrims recount time at Coronavirus quarantine camp in Pakistan

MenInG

PakPassion Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 2, 2004
Runs
217,990
QUETTA: The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Balochistan has risen to 96, as health workers and officials in the province struggle to deal with the deadly outbreak.

In Quetta alone, 56 people tested positive in a single day on March 19. The patients were first kept in isolation at the Taftan border, between Balochistan and Iran, and then shifted to the quarantine center in Mian Ghundi in southwest Quetta.

Nearly all those who have been infected recently arrived from Iran, via the border crossing. Those who were residents of Balochistan have been kept back, while the others were sent off to their hometowns in other provinces.

Directing pilgrims back to their cities has invited sharp criticism from other provinces, where officials insist that the men, women and children should have been tested and screened properly for the virus at the border.

But the reality is that dealing with a large influx of pilgrims overwhelmed the government of the poorest province in Pakistan, whose healthcare system, due to years of neglect, has remained under-resourced and understaffed.

Since last month, when the pandemic was first reported in Iran, 6,810 Pakistani pilgrims crossed the Pak-Iran border. As per the data of Balochistan’s health department, these people, after being kept at the border camps briefly, were sent to their hometowns on February 28.

At the moment, 422 people are still isolated at Taftan, a majority of whom belong to Quetta.

Doctors and medical staff who have visited the camp on the border paint a grim picture. “Some patients have cardiac problems, others have diabetes,” a doctor told Geo News on the condition of anonymity, “Yet, everyone is being held like prisoners.”

Eye-witnesses further detail the appalling conditions in which patients are being kept. “We are all being housed together in a large hall of an official building, known as the ‘Pakistan House Taftan’,” said Akbar Ali, a pilgrim who has just returned from Iran, “The center is hot, dusty and without basic facilities.”

Last week, the shortage of doctors and other medical staff forced people to protest outside their camps.

In a recent press briefing, Sindh’s minister for education and labor slammed the Balochistan’s administration for poor arrangements at the border.

Responding to the allegation, Jam Kamal Khan, the chief minister of Balochistan, said in a tweet that his government was accommodating, medically assisting and facilitating all those arriving into the province, without help from other provinces.

“Did you send a single person to see your own people or send assistance,” he had tweeted.

https://www.geo.tv/latest/278432-he...ftan-pilgrims-recount-time-at-quarantine-camp
 
I think pakistan is in serious trouble since there epidemic started from their poorest province just like UP, Bihar in India. And people are just too casual and Balochistan is literally like with no health care, even worse than UP, Bihar
 
Dr Osama Riaz, who was screening pilgrims who had returned to Pakistan from Iran, tested positive on Friday, the top health official in the country’s northern Gilgit province, Shah Zaman, told Reuters by phone, adding he had subsequently died.

Pakistan, which borders Iran and China, two of the most affected countries, has reported three deaths and 658 infected patients, the highest number in South Asia.

With a broken healthcare system and the world’s sixth-largest population of 208 million people, Pakistan remains in danger of a large scale spread of the virus, experts have warned.

Besides Riaz a couple of more doctors have also shown symptoms, officials say.

“We request the government to immediately provide us personal protection equipment,” Dr Asfandyar Khan, president of staff at the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences in Islamabad, told a news conference on Friday.

“It is like suicide to treat patients without protection,” he said, adding: “If infection spreads in hospitals, believe me no person will be ready to touch any patient.”

He threatened doctors would stop work if they and other healthcare staff aren’t given necessary equipment by Monday.

Pakistan’s health minister Zafar Mirza held a meeting with doctors’ representatives on Saturday. “Health workforce is my first priority,” he said on Twitter.

The chief of Pakistan’s national disaster management department Lt. Gen. Muhammad Afzal said on Friday that 12,500 pieces of personal equipment had been procured. His spokesman Saqib Mumtaz said on Sunday the kits had been sent to hospitals.

Ventilator shortage is another issue.

“We have 1,700 ventilators in public hospitals and another 600 in the private sector,” said Afzal, adding an order had been made to procure 800 more.

He said an order for 200,000 N95 masks and 100,000 kits to test the virus had also been placed to enhance the country’s capacity to cater to 900,000 people.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-threat-over-lack-of-protection-idUSKBN21910G
 
Back
Top