Health
Pakistan engages with Afghanistan to eradicate polio
Addressing a ceremony in Islamabad to launch Pakistan’s campaign, he said they aim to immunise millions of children

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said on Sunday that the government had been in contact with Afghanistan to eliminate polio.
Addressing a ceremony in Islamabad to launch Pakistan’s campaign, he said they aim to immunise millions of children.
Shehbaz said: “We initiated the first polio eradication campaign of 2025 today.”
“Anti-polio teams will fulfil their duty by administering vaccine drops to children.”
Sharif revealed that only one polio case had been reported in January this year in Pakistan but stated: “I wish not a single case had emerged this year.”
He said that in collaboration with global organisations and partners, Pakistan would strive for polio eradication.
“We will eliminate polio with the assistance of Saudi Arabia, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and other partners.”
The prime minister reiterated that Pakistan had been coordinating with Afghanistan to combat polio. He emphasised that only through joint efforts could the disease be eradicated.
The World Health Organization stated last month that the total number of wild polio cases in Afghanistan last year were 25 and Pakistan 73.
This was against the total case count of 12 in 2023 – six in Afghanistan and six in Pakistan.
In December, Afghanistan’s Ministry of Public Health announced that they had started a polio vaccination campaign in a number of provinces of the country in coordination with international organizations.
According to a press release from the ministry, at least 5.3 million children under the age of five received the polio vaccine in 11 provinces of the country.
Afghanistan and Pakistan are the only two countries in the world where polio has not yet been eradicated and is still claiming the lives of children.
Health
Head of MSF in Afghanistan meets with Jalali over improving healthcare services
Michael Lippi committed to making efforts aimed at improving the quality of healthcare services and fostering better coordination.

Afghanistan’s Acting Minister of Health Noorjilal Jalali met with the head of Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) for Afghanistan, Michael Lippi, for discussions on improving healthcare centers and medical services in the country.
The two officials also discussed enhancing the capacity of healthcare workers, ensuring transparency in services, improving coordination with the Ministry of Public Health, and delivering effective and sustainable healthcare services.
Jalali emphasized the importance of increasing and expanding the organization’s support for the health sector and called for further development of services.
He stressed the need to enhance the capacity, quality, effectiveness, and transparency of healthcare workers.
Michael Lippi also emphasized the need for further improvements in health services in Afghanistan and the expansion of this sector.
He committed to efforts aimed at improving the quality of healthcare services and fostering better coordination. He specifically addressed the continuation of services in the provinces of Herat, Kunduz, and Helmand, confirming that these centers will continue their operations in collaboration with the Ministry of Public Health.
Meanwhile, Mohammad Naeem, the Deputy Minister for Finance and Administration at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Interim Government, held a separate meeting with
Michael Lippi to discuss the expansion of healthcare services and the provision of necessary facilities for returning migrants.
According to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Lippi reassured government that MSF’s efforts to improve maternal and child health and enhance the capacity of healthcare personnel will continue.
Health
Japanese charity Peshawar-Kai to resume leprosy treatment in Afghanistan

Peshawar-Kai, a Japanese aid organization, has announced that it will resume leprosy treatment in Afghanistan after around 15 years.
The charity will treat leprosy patients in memory of its former head Tetsu Nakamura, Japan’s Yomiuri Shimbun newspaper reported.
The NGO will begin its leprosy treatment program in Afghanistan this year.
It will treat patients in areas such as Nangarhar province by providing medicines, training staff and sending mobile treatment teams.
Leprosy, also known as Hansen disease, is a chronic infectious disease caused mainly by a type of bacteria called Mycobacterium leprae. The disease affects the skin, the peripheral nerves, the mucosa of the upper respiratory tract and the eyes.
Nakamura started treated leprosy patients in Pakistan in the 1980s and then began extensive activities, including the construction of water supply canals in Afghanistan.
The Japanese aid worker was killed in an armed attack in Jalalabad in December 2019.
Health
WHO confirms second Polio case in Afghanistan
The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan’s Public Health Ministry has not yet commented.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has confirmed the second case of polio in Afghanistan for the year 2025.
The case was identified in March in Helmand province.
This follows the first reported case in the Bala Murghab district of Badghis province, where a five-year-old girl was diagnosed with the virus.
Additionally, 18 environmental samples testing positive for the polio virus have been reported in provinces including Kandahar, Helmand, Kabul, Laghman, Nangarhar, and Zabul.
Afghanistan and Pakistan remain the only countries where polio has not been eradicated.
Polio is a viral disease for which there is no cure, and vaccination is the only way to protect children from it.
The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan’s Public Health Ministry has not yet commented.
-
Latest News5 days ago
TAPI pipeline to reach Herat by end of 2025: Ministry
-
Sport5 days ago
IPL 2025: Dharamsala match abandoned due to security concerns
-
Regional4 days ago
India says military stations attacked by Pakistan drones and missiles
-
Latest News4 days ago
One dead, dozens injured as powerful storm strikes Jalalabad, Afghanistan
-
Latest News4 days ago
Ex-Afghan deputy speaker Qadeer back in Kenyan court for criminal case
-
Health4 days ago
Japanese charity Peshawar-Kai to resume leprosy treatment in Afghanistan
-
Sport4 days ago
India suspends Indian Premier League T20 cricket tournament
-
Latest News3 days ago
Pakistan says India launched attack on Afghanistan, India denies