3m without IDs may miss out on Covid-19 jabs

Only Pakistani nationals or immigrants who have either CNIC or official refugee status can receive the jabs.


May 23, 2021
KARACHI:

A prove-your-identity condition may leave three million people in the country without coronavirus vaccines, including mainly unregistered refugees, jeopardising Pakistan’s fight against the pandemic.

Currently, only Pakistani nationals or immigrants who have either computerised national identification cards (CNIC) or official refugee status can receive the jabs.

Pakistan has so far vaccinated nearly 3 million people, a ratio well below that of India. Over 1.5 million unregistered refugees living in Pakistan, particularly from Afghanistan, will miss out on the vaccination for not having identity documents.

Besides, thousands of CNICs have been blocked in recent years by the National Database Registration Authority (Nadra) for different reasons. There are around 2.8 million documented and undocumented Afghan refugees in Pakistan, making it the world’s second-largest refugee population after Syrians in Turkey.

Only around half of the refugees are registered, with the rest living undocumented, mostly in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, which border the war-torn Afghanistan.

Sindh also hosts nearly 500,000 Afghan refugees. The United Nations suggests that more than 3.8 million refugees have been repatriated to Afghanistan since 2002.

Read NCOC allows walk-in vaccination for Pakistanis studying, working abroad

However, many have returned to Pakistan due to ongoing violence, unemployment, and lack of education and medical facilities.

Apart from Afghan refugees, Pakistan, and mainly Karachi, also has a sizable population of unregistered Bengali, Nepali, and Rohingya immigrants.

As per the current procedure, citizens before being vaccinated must register themselves by sending their CNIC numbers to a designated official portal.

When asked about any alternative ways to get vaccinated for unregistered refugees or citizens who do not have the CNIC, Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on Health Dr Faisal Sultan told Anadolu Agency that refugees with “Proof of Registration (PoR)” cards issued by the government were allowed to get vaccinated.

In the brief message, he did not respond to a query about an alternative way for unregistered refugees. Dangerous move The Pakistan Medical Association (PMA) has demanded that the registration process be halted because it “may deprive millions of people” of Covid-19 vaccines.

“We have long been demanding that unnecessary conditions for vaccination will discourage millions to get vaccinated,” Dr Qaisar Sajjad, the PMA’s secretary-general, told Anadolu Agency. According to Qaisar, around 3 million locals and refugees would not be eligible to receive vaccinations under the current system.

The large numbers of Afghan, Bengali, Nepali, and Rohingya refugees will not be the only ones unable to get vaccinated against the highly contagious Covid-19. So will a significant number of citizens, mostly those living in rural areas and who have not yet obtained a CNIC, he said.

“It will simply tatter the benefits of the large-scale vaccination and the relentless efforts of the health professionals if such a huge portion of the population is not vaccinated just because they do not have identity cards,” Sajjad opined.

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