Pakistan has quarantined 20,000 worshippers and is still searching for tens of thousands more who attended an Islamic gathering in Lahore last month despite the worsening coronavirus pandemic, officials said on Sunday.
Authorities said they want to test or quarantine those who congregated at the event held by the Tablighi Jamaat – an Islamic missionary movement – between March 10-12 over fears they are now spreading COVID-19 across Pakistan and overseas.
More than 100,000 people went to the meeting, organisers said, undeterred by government requests for it to be cancelled as the virus hit the country.
In Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, authorities have so far quarantined 5,300 Islamic preachers who attended the Lahore meeting.
“Health officials are conducting tests for coronavirus and some of them have tested positive,” Ajmal Wazir, a spokesperson for the region, told AFP on Sunday.
Wazir said thousands of Tablighis from his province were stranded in other regions because of the closure of major highways across the country.
About 7,000 have been quarantined in Lahore, while in Sindh up to 8,000 Tablighis have been quarantined, government officials said. Dozens more have been forced to self-isolate in Balochistan.
The Tablighi mosques and the movement’s other places of worship were shut down or marked as quarantine centres at the end of March.
At least 154 worshippers who went to last month’s Jamaat had tested positive for coronavirus, with two fatalities, authorities told AFP.
Coronavirus has killed at least 47 people in Pakistan but with only limited testing available, observers worry the number is far higher.
Tablighi Jamaat is considered one of the world’s largest faith-based movements, with millions of followers, particularly in South Asia, and sends preachers to countries to spread Islam’s ideas.
Numerous foreign nationals attended this year from countries including China, Indonesia, Nigeria and Afghanistan, organisers said.
About 1,500 foreigners are now quarantined in Pakistan, but others left the country without being tested.
Gaza’s health ministry confirmed last month its first two cases of coronavirus were Palestinians who had attended the gathering.
Minister for Science and Technology Fawad Chaudhry earlier expressed exasperation that the event had gone ahead, blaming the “stubbornness of the clergy”.
Organisers said they cut the gathering short following advice from the authorities, however at the time they said it was due to rainy weather.
Similar Tablighi Jamaat congregations held in Malaysia and India during the coronavirus pandemic have been blamed for spreading the virus to other nations.
Meanwhile, at least 66 more patients recovered from the coronavirus pandemic at the Sukkur quarantine facility on Sunday, according to a spokesperson for the provincial government.
The recovered patients twice tested negative for COVID-19 and will be allowed to go home.
The spokesperson said they belonged to different districts of the province that has so far reported 881 cases of COVID-19.
Sindh Minister for Heath Dr Azra Pechuho said as many as 51 more cases of coronavirus have been diagnosed in Sindh, of them 37 were detected in Karachi, four in Hyderabad, two in Naushahro Feroze and one each in Sukkur and Sajawal. She maintained that at least 13 people have been affected by the pandemic in Larkana thus far.
On the other hand, a group of 74 pilgrims, including 40 women and five children, reached Jhang on Sunday.
They had reached Multan from Iran after which they were sent to Jhang. There they have been quarantined at a university.
According to Punjab’s health department, the pilgrims have been tested for the coronavirus. While the authorities await their results, they have been isolated.
All the facilities at the centre have been provided and the people are being looked after well, the department ensured. Thousands of pilgrims returned from Iran after which they were quarantined in multiple cities.