Epaper – November 24 KHI 2020

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Tuesday, 24 November, 2020 I 7 Rabi al-Akhir, 1442 I Rs 15.00 I Vol XI No 145 I 12 Pages I Karachi Edition

Educational institutions to closE again as covid-19 casEs risE g

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Institutions to remain closed from November 26 to December 24; winter break from December 25 to January 10

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Entrance, recruitment examinations, including MDCAT, to take place as per schedule

IPEMC meeting in January to chalk out future course of action

Virus hospitalisations in Pakistan double in two weeks ISLAMABAD

ISLAMABAD

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STAFF REPORT

STAFF REPORT

S the fresh coronavirus cases continue to surge across the country, the government on Monday decided to close down again all educational institutions from November 26 (Thursday). Announcing the decision after a meeting of the Inter-Provincial Education Ministers Conference (IPEMC), Federal Minister for Education Shafqat Mahmood said that the institutes will open on December 24 while the winter break will occur from December 25 till January 10, 2021. “Studies will continue from home,” Shafqat told a press conference following the meeting. “No in-person classes will be conducted during this time,” he said. However, he added, teachers would be required to continue attending schools in line with their administration’s policies. In areas where online facilities did not exist, children will be assigned homework, the minister said. Covid-19 infections in Pakistan have been on a rise for a month now. The country recorded its highest positivity ratio at 7.46 per cent on Monday. Commenting on the trend, the National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC) said that 19 per cent of the cases were from the educational sector. “On average 35 people lost lives during last week, 19 per cent of cases are

from the education sector. Positivity ratio in educational institutions increase from 1.8 per cent to 3.3 per cent during last one week, which is actually 82 per cent increase,” an NCOC statement read. Mahmood said that if the situation visibly improved, all educational institutions would reopen from January 11, adding this would be determined during a meeting of the IPEMC in the first week of January. He said that all exams were being postponed in light of this decision. Special Assistant to Prime Minister on Health Dr Faisal Sultan clarified that this would not apply to entrance examinations such as already-delayed MDCAT, saying that the government felt these could be safely

managed with the use of face masks. Mahmood said that vocational education would not be halted, as such activities were occurring in factories and practical settings. He said that a third of all university hostel students could continue to live in school accommodations so long as they did not have access to the internet at their homes. The education minister said that current plans called on reducing summer vacations, and commencing the next school year from August — not the currently scheduled April — to enable students to complete their course work. He said that the educational ministers were also proposing delaying board exams till May or June.

As the country sees inflation in the number of fresh coronavirus infections, hospitalisations due to virus-related complications doubled in the last two weeks, adding stress for the already troubled healthcare sector. According to the government portal for tracking the spread of coronavirus in the country, Pakistan on Monday recorded 2,756 new cases after conducting 36,929 tests — a positivity ratio of 7.46 per cent. A meeting of the National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC) was informed on Monday of the rising number of infections in several cities — including Rawalpindi, Multan, Lahore and Faisalabad in Punjab; Karachi and Hyderabad in Sindh; Peshawar, Abbottabad and Swat in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP); Mirpur in Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK); Gilgit and Islamabad. According to a statement, there had also been an increase in the number of infections reported at educational institutions across the country, with 19 per cent of total coronavirus cases being recorded among students. The positivity ratio in educational institutions rose from 1.8 per cent to 3.3 per cent during the last week — an increase of 82 per cent. For the past several weeks, authorities have been sounding the alarm over a second wave of the coronavirus outbreak. Earlier this month, the nationwide positivity rate surpassed 5 per cent after a gap of over three months. The maximum positivity rate had reached 23 per cent in June as it had increased from 6 per cent in May, while the positivity rate was brought down to 1.7 per cent in September. The death rate, meanwhile, shot up to a four-month high on Sunday with 59 virus-related deaths in a single day. Despite the grim situation, the country has yet to fully utilise its claimed testing capacity of 74,407 and is currently testing significantly below numbers proposed by global health experts, reports suggest. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), the country’s testing policies likely only record the most symptomatic patients while ignoring the spread among asymptomatic carriers, which studies have suggested comprise the majority of infections in the country. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Imran Khan has reminded people to use face masks in public places “to slow down the rate of the virus and ultimately control the pandemic” and follow social distancing measures.

Saudi Arabia denies reports of Netanyahu meeting MBS in the kingdom AGENCIES Saudi Arabia on Monday denied Israeli media reports of landmark talks between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman during a visit by US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. “I have seen press reports about a purported meeting between HRH the Crown Prince and Israeli officials during the recent visit by @SecPompeo,” Saudi Foreign

Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan said in a tweet. “No such meeting occurred. The only officials present were American and Saudi.” Israeli public broadcaster Kan and other outlets had reported that the meeting took place on Sunday, weeks after the Jewish state reached historic deals to normalise ties with two Saudi allies, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain. Those deals, known as the Abraham Accords, were brokered by the administration of US President

Donald Trump, who leaves office in less than two months. Hebrew-language media cited an unnamed Israeli official as saying that Netanyahu and Yossi Cohen, head of Israel’s Mossad spy agency, flew to the Saudi city of Neom on Sunday, where they met with the crown prince. The prince was there for talks with Pompeo, who was in Israel last week before travelling onto Saudi during a regional tour.

CONTINUED ON PAGE 05

more inside

Provinces directed to keep check on food prices

PM for all possible steps to prevent spread of Covid-19

STORY ON PAGE 09

STORY ON PAGE 03

SBP keeps policy rate unchanged at 7pc STORY ON PAGE 09

IMF chief urges G20 leaders to jointly rebuild global economy

STORY ON BACK PAGE

coronavirus in

Pakistan

CONFIRMED CASES:

376,929

LAST UPDATED AT 7:26 AM ON NOVEMBER 23, 2020

DAY'S DEATH TOLL:

34

RECOVERED:

NEW CASES:

2,756 DEATHS:

329,828 7,696 SINDH:

PUNJAB:

163,329

114,508

KP:

BALOCHISTAN:

AJK/GB:

ISLAMABAD:

44,599

16,810

6,123/4,542 27,018


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