Advertisement

Analysis | Pakistan emerges from ‘smart lockdown’ as Imran Khan faces criticism for coronavirus response

  • The country of 200 million is lifting restrictions despite a rise in infections
  • Leader Imran Khan had championed a lockdown that was less severe than in other countries, but now there is fear the measures did not go far enough

Reading Time:4 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Children swim to beat the heat during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan in Sindh province, Pakistan. Photo: EPA

A cynic might suggest the Pakistani government’s measures to fight Covid-19 are inversely proportional to its number of infections.

Advertisement

On Monday, the country of 200 million began lifting restrictions on factory, office and commercial shop operations that had been in place for more than a month, although curbs remain on public transport, school and large shopping centres.

But critics say the curbs – termed a “smart lockdown” by Prime Minister Imran Khan because they involved targeted tracking of cases and allowed some commercial activities to continue – have done too little to contain the spread of the coronavirus.
Pakistan has more than 32,000 infections, up from 21,500 just a week ago.

01:31

News reports showed markets across the country were thronged by people and doctors worry that increasing crowds as the Eid holiday approaches will fuel a larger outbreak.

Advertisement
Advertisement