Is Pakistan the curve of the coronavirus?

Suddenly, 2020 is rushed to conclude its global turmoil business, thinking about the odds of doing anything other than publishing a global notification of the insignificance of human life. 2020 and its greatest ally, the bold, ruthless, borderless coronavirus. Why I feel this way on this rainy, boring morning in July, I don’t know. Maybe my little sleepy brain is in its old way of refusing to look at the whole with no less than curling up in a fetus-shaped coma.

I need the global to be different, safer, happier, mouths discovered through the mask when curled up in smiles, other people holding hands, hugs as loose as the tinkling laughter of a six-year-old who mocks my 20-year-old. Child. Sprinkled with sweetness and love, there is pain, but there is also the safety of this fatality: nothing lasts forever. I sigh, quietly peaceful.

Today, there’s anything that makes me smile, even in a healing way. I don’t need to hurt him. In recent days, I have read that Pakistan is reaching a level where a well-deserved respite can be taken, taking a careful look at the statistics of the COVID-19 case and allowing itself to smile. A cautious but smiling smile is. Without a mask in solitude, six feet or more when in the company of other humans, it is common to smile or even laugh. Muttering a dua, the Pakistani world is a little different, safer and happier on July 27, 2020. Coronavirus cases in Pakistan are declining. It is so great that it defies almost any logic of the 2020 trajectory in its infallible indifference to the known regulations and regulations of human mortality.

In the words of Mr. Bilal Lakhani, a Pakistani journalist, and I love it for his fidelity in showing the positive aspect of Pakistan while highlighting its darker aspects, the defeated July situation is “the astonishing flattening of the COVID-19 curve in Pakistan”. The word “dazzling” sums it up in its double simplicity: it is very unexpected and very impressive. I can’t write any of this without adding mashAllah. And without saying alhamdullilah out loud. Even if it is, God forbid, a transient cessation of the spread of the fatal coronavirus, my gratitude, like that of millions of Pakistanis, to Allah is immense.

Allaah shows his mercy in many ways. Some are visible, others misunderstood.

There are also positive symptoms – verifiable, medically attested, verified throughout the government – that should not be overlooked, not underestimated, regardless of non-public prejudices, political pettiness, cynical pessimism, apathy tired in the face of the force of science, humanity and nature wring in combination to shape a united front opposite an enigmatic enemy. Facts speak for themselves. And after writing many times about Pakistan and the global redefinition of its lifestyle and survival regulations, I can only rejoice at the new twist of the fractured history of a global pandemic that, in many parts of the world, still does not seem to be taking effect. pause. While I want to protect the lives of both COVID-19 users and pray for the well-being of both in one country, I feel a relief today because things, which affect wood, are improving in Pakistan.

The Pakistani government, in trouble, has stood firmly on one point: Prime Minister Imran Khan’s absolute fear of the millions of Pakistanis living in daily poverty, those living below the official poverty line. Prime Minister Khan’s initial reluctance to impose a full national blockade was based on his constant fear of Pakistan’s poor, whose daily or monthly income would be avoided immediately, causing devastation in their lives that was and is even worse than that of the coronavirus. After the partial lifting of the entire blockade, Prime Minister Khan begged for wise padlocks on the hot spots of the coronavirus. Wise locks have been imposed throughout Pakistan.

Quoting the Minister of State of Health, Dr. Zafar Mirza, in the Lakhani Express Tribune article, “First of all, it is a fact that Pakistan surpassed its peak of COVID-19 in mid-June. Even through our own estimates, we expected the peak to succeed in us in July or mid-August, and a number of points from this early decline. “Two of these points are” change in human behavior [Pakistanis perceive the threat of COVID-19 and take precautions seriously] and early and effective government interventions [e.g., 2,300 smart locks affecting 47 million Pakistanis].”

Lakhani writes: “Dr. Mirza has detailed the more than fifty evidence-based political decisions that have helped Pakistan flatten the curve before expectations.” For Lakhani: “How did it remain anchored in knowledge when there was mass hysteria in the press and political tension of the opposition to replace the course?” Dr. Mirza’s reaction is an uncomfortable manifestation of the possibilities of belief and habit that the government has had and continues to fight in addition to the horror of coronavirus: “We knew temporarily the origin of this hysteriaArray … who came here from the upper middle class. Pakistan, which had the resources to watch Netflix and not worry about its revenue. They tried to protect themselves by applying bulk locks and ignoring what would happen to everyone. The lower categories are wordless and are not a component of public discourse. »

Not in Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan. The poor, the disadvantaged, the daily wage earners, the millions of other people who have almost no income, have been Khan’s most sensible precedent in Pakistan’s fight against coronavirus. Deaf and faceless Pakistanis would possibly not be part of public discourse, however, they are the most sensitive of all Imran Khan’s painting systems, before and during the coronavirus era.

Dr Mirza said: “Prime Minister Imran Khan had the firm will to care for Pakistan’s deficient in this disaster. Without commitment to the deficient, I would continue to repeat it in all our policy-making talks.”

Without allowing any speculation about the danger of the coronavirus falling into a June thing, Dr. Mirza is categorically transparent about the unwelcome celebration, considering the reality: “With the arrival of Eid and Muharram, it is time for complacency.”

In the fight between the government opposed to the coronavirus, in addition to the slowness and stability of others to take COVID-19’s terror seriously, the continued contribution of many other people is invaluable. It’ll still be.

In Pakistan, countless doctors, nurses, paramedics and other hospital staff, from superintendents to cleaning staff, often paint to ensure the availability of the most productive imaginable amenities for COVID-19 patients. Some of them succumbed to COVID-19 while they were concerned about patients. Some of them have contracted the disease in other ways. His service is indescribable, his altruism is second to none, his sacrifices are too much to be commendable in a legend. Pakistan was, is and will remain indebted to all of them.

Dr. Zafar Mirza is the frontline user in the Pakistani government’s national efforts to save him and treat COVID-19. Dr. Mirza’s paintings are in the ongoing combat of Pakistan opposed to the coronavirus.

The National Command and Operations Center (NCOC) is “a nerve center for synergizing and articulating the unified national effort opposed to COVID-19, and to implement the decisions of the COVID-19 National Coordinator”. Prime Minister Imran Khan chairs the NCOC. The Federal Minister of Planning, Development, Reform and Special Initiatives Asad Umar has the task, through the Prime Minister, to lead the organization. The paintings of the ncOC are essential in Pakistan’s ongoing battle against coronavirus.

All provinces, the supervision and recommendation of their chief ministers and teams, as well as their ministers and fitness teams, run tirelessly in the coronavirus era.

In Punjab, they are Chief Minister Usman Buzdar and Punjab Health Minister Dr. Yasmin Rashid and his teams. In Sindh, they are Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah and Minister of Health Dr. Azra Fazal Pechuho and his teams. In Balochistan, they are Chief Minister Jam Kamal Khan and Health Minister Rahmat Saleh Baloch and his teams. In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, they are Chief Minister Mahmood Khan and Minister of Finance and Health Taimur Khan Jhagra and his teams. In Azad Jammu and Kashmir, there is the Minister of Health, Dr. Najeeb Naqi, and his team. In Gilgit-Baltistan, they are former Chief Minister Hafeez-ur-Rehman, Acting Chief Minister Mir Afzal Khan, FCNA Commander, Major General Ehsan Mehmood, Chief Secretary Khurrum Agha, Health Secretary Raja Rasheed and Interior Minister Ali Randhawa. His paintings are in the battle of Pakistan opposed to the coronavirus.

Pakistan on July 27, 2020 at 12:27 p.m. has 274289 cases shown. The number of patients recovering from COVID-19 is 241,026. The number of critical patients is 1,229. It makes me deeply saddened. 1,229 families suffer each and every minute of the hospitalization of their enjoyment. The number of other people who didn’t was 5,842. This represents for me 5,842 families who have lost a joy, those who mourn each and every day for their irreplaceable loss. Let the number not increase.

The munificence of Allaah is unlimited. In terms of human actions, Pakistan has its own saga of coronavirus ongoing, and it does not end until a vaccine becomes a truth and is injected within the framework of every human in the world. Imagine the magnitude of that. So, until that happens, and as long as there’s a Pakistani who has COVID-19, the daily conversion dynamics of the coronavirus will remain a truth. The sigh of relief is a reflection, but it’s too early to seek a national pass and not a public pass for a full party.

That Pakistan will soon be free of coronavirus.

That the overall total will soon be coronavirus-free.

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