Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

12 Indian High Commission officials asked to quarantine in Pakistan

A GROUP of 12 Indian High Commission (IHC) officials have been asked to quarantine along with their families and drivers in Pakistan.

High Commission officials and their family members crossed over to Pakistan through the Wagah Border on Saturday  (22), foreign office spokesperson Zahid Hafeez Chaudhri said on Sunday (23).


All 12 passengers carried negative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) Covid-19 reports, but they were re-tested in line with the laid down Covid-19 safety protocols in Pakistan.

“The wife of an official tested positive on a rapid antigen test conducted by Pakistani health officials,” the spokesperson said.

Pakistan’s top body on the pandemic, the National Command and Control Centre (NCOC), reviewed the case and advised all 12 officials, their family members and drivers to undergo the mandatory quarantine.

“The Indian High Commission has been advised to strictly follow the guidelines provided by the NCOC,” the official said.

The Express Tribune newspaper quoted diplomatic sources as saying that as per the standard operating procedures (SOPs) agreed between the two countries, if a member of the diplomatic staff or their associates tested positive for Covid-19, they will be quarantined in the same country instead of being sent back.

“Pakistani authorities have acted in accordance with the law,” they added.

The coronavirus has so far killed 20,308 people in Pakistan, along with 903,599 confirmed covid-19 cases, according to official data released on Monday (24).

More For You

Mosques to receive security funding following rise in hate crimes

Prime minister Keir Starmer holds a copy of The Quran, as he stands with home secretary Shabana Mahmood (R) during a visit to Peacehaven Mosque near Brighton in southern England, on October 23, 2025. (Photo by PETER NICHOLLS/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

Mosques to receive security funding following rise in hate crimes

MOSQUES and Muslim faith centres across the country will receive an additional £10 million in security funding to protect them from hate crime and attacks, prime minister Keir Starmer announced on Thursday (23).

Starmer, accompanied by home secretary Shabana Mahmood, announced the funding following a visit to Peacehaven Mosque in East Sussex, which was targeted in an arson attack on October 4.

Keep ReadingShow less