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09 June 2026
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09 June 2026
Media Update-2: United Nations Pakistan, 5 June 2026
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09 June 2026
Media Update: United Nations Pakistan, 4 June 2026
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The Sustainable Development Goals in Pakistan
Pakistan affirmed its commitment to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development by adopting the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) as its own national development agenda through a unanimous National Assembly Resolution in 2016. Since then, the country has made considerable progress by mainstreaming these goals in national policies and strategies and developing an institutional framework for SDGs implementation in Pakistan. SDG support units have been established at federal and provincial levels with the planning institutions (Ministry of Planning Development and Special Initiatives and Provincial Planning and Development Departments) to guide SDGs implementation and monitoring it progress. In 2018, the Government designed and approved a National SDGs Framework that envisages a national vision to prioritize and localize SDGs. Localized provincial SDG Frameworks are being formulated. The focus of the government is on mainstreaming SDGs in planning processes, ensuring strong monitoring and reporting on SDGs, ensuring public financial allocations are aligned to SDGs and alternate financing modalities are being explored, and to benefit from use of technology to accelerate progress towards SDGs.
Publication
22 May 2026
UN Pakistan Annual Report 2025
For Pakistan and the international system as a whole, 2025 was a turbulent year. Climate shocks, economic volatility, geopolitical uncertainty and regional instability combined to put pressure on people, institutions and public finances alike. And yet, 2025 was also a story of resilience, adaptation and determined action.This Annual Results report shows how, in 2025, the United Nations stood with Pakistan – and how, together with government, communities and partners, we delivered results for people across the country. It also reflects a central lesson of the year: in a more volatile world, complex challenges cannot be met with fragmented responses. Just as the pressures Pakistan faces are interconnected, so too must be the solutions. The United Nations Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework for Pakistan 2023–2027 provides a basis for that integrated approach, bringing together our collective efforts across social services, inclusion, climate resilience, economic opportunity, governance and human rights.
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Publication
16 April 2026
The Future of Governance and the Social Contract
This issue of the Development Advocate Pakistan, The Future of Governance and the Social Contract, examines how governance capacity, not policy ambition alone, will determine Pakistan’s ability to navigate economic volatility, climate pressures, digital transformation, and widening inequality. At a moment of overlapping national transitions, it argues that restoring trust in the state depends on stronger institutions, better coordination, and closing the gap between reform commitments and lived outcomes.The issue features a leadership perspective by Honourable Bilal Azhar Kayani, Minister of State for Finance and Railways and Head of the Prime Minister’s Delivery Unit, alongside reflections from UNDP Pakistan’s Resident Representative Dr. Samuel Rizk and Deputy Resident Representative Van Nguyen; Sam Waldock, Development Director at the British Deputy High Commission in Islamabad; and Saroop Ijaz, Lawyer and Human Rights Advocate The issue also brings together diverse technical experts and thought leaders examining governance through multiple lenses, including fiscal federalism, constitutional accountability, digital rights, climate governance, water security, regional inequality, inclusion, and more. Among the contributing authors are Christina Murray, Visiting Fellow at Kellogg College, University of Oxford and Gideon Basson, PhD Candidate, University of Oxford; Asma Hyder, Former Dean and Professor at IBA Karachi; Nargis Sethi, Former Cabinet Secretary and Principal Secretary to the Prime Minister; Mehreen Naushad, International Law Expert; Dr. Sajid Amin, Deputy Executive Director at SDPI; Shmyla Khan, Researcher and Campaigner; Sara Hayat, Climate Change Law & Policy Specialist; Mohsin Leghari, Former Provincial Minister for Irrigation, Punjab; and Peter Jacob, Director of the Centre for Social Justice. The report concludes with a case study from UNDP’s Democratic Governance Unit, highlighting practical efforts to institutionalize results-based delivery within the Prime Minister’s Office.Together, these contributions underscore a central message: the future of Pakistan’s social contract will be determined not only by constitutional guarantees or reform plans, but by the strength, coherence, and accountability of the institutions that bring them to life.
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Publication
16 April 2026
Pakistan’s National Strategy to Counter Technology-Facilitated Gender-Based Violence
As Pakistan’s digital landscape expands, so does the need to ensure that online spaces are safe, inclusive, and rights-based. In 2024, eight million new female users came online, marking important progress in digital inclusion. Yet in the same year, 135,000 cybercrime complaints were reported, while only 826 cases proceeded to prosecution — just 0.6 percent. This gap between access and protection highlights the scale of the challenge and the need for a stronger institutional response.Technology-facilitated gender-based violence (TFGBV) is increasingly shaping how women and girls experience digital spaces in Pakistan. From harassment and cyberstalking to image-based abuse, impersonation, and coordinated online intimidation, these harms can restrict expression, participation, and access to opportunity, while reinforcing existing inequalities.To respond to this growing challenge, the Ministry of Human Rights, Government of Pakistan, in collaboration with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), has developed Pakistan’s first National Strategy to Counter Technology-Facilitated Gender-Based Violence. This strategy marks an important step toward a more coordinated, survivor-centred, and rights-based response. Developed through a consultative multi-stakeholder process, the strategy provides a national framework to strengthen prevention, protection, redress, and institutional coordination, while helping ensure that women and girls can participate in digital life with safety, dignity, and confidence.
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Publication
06 May 2026
Delivering for People and Planet - UNDP Pakistan Annual Report 2025
Our Key AchievementsIn 2025, UNDP Pakistan advanced its mission to deliver for people and planet in a context marked by renewed climate shocks, economic pressure, and rising expectations for public service delivery. Guided by the Country Programme Document 2023–2027 and implemented in close partnership with the Government of Pakistan, provincial authorities, communities, civil society, development partners, and the UN system, our work focused on practical results that people could see and feel in their daily lives.Our ImpactUNDP works across Pakistan to support national priorities while responding to local realities. Our impact is reflected in the way communities are better protected from climate and disaster risks, livelihoods are restored and diversified, women and young people gain new pathways to opportunity, justice and public services become more accessible, and institutions are strengthened to plan, finance, and deliver for people.
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Publication
08 November 2022
United Nations Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework (UNSDCF) 2023-2027 for Pakistan
With this framework, the UN in Pakistan has prioritized five development outcomes to improve people’s lives in Pakistan, especially the lives of those at the greatest risk of being left behind. The UN will support Pakistan to move forward on its pathway towards sustainable development, on the understanding that:✓ If basic social services – including health, nutrition, water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH), education and social protection – are strengthened, there will be increased equal access to sustainable quality services for all.✓ If women, girls and transgender persons are empowered to reach their fullest potential, their human, social, economic and cultural rights will be fully protected and upheld, and they will have decision-making power over all aspects of their lives.✓ If the health of the Indus River Basin is restored and protected, and resources are equitably and efficiently used, the Indus will sustain a thriving civilization from its sources to the sea, and Pakistan will be much better equipped to adapt to climate change and mitigate its impact.✓ If there is sustainable and inclusive green economic growth and decent work, there will be equitable employment opportunities, enhanced productivity, a sustainable business environment and the realization of workers’ rights.✓ If inclusive, accountable and efficient governance systems are in place, they will provide equitable service delivery, affordable and accessible justice systems, and enable people to be aware of – and obtain – their rights.To download an abridged version: Click here
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Story
21 May 2026
Pakistan: protecting millions against polio with support from KSrelief
“Just as we care for the children in our own homes and protect them from polio, I want all innocent children in our country to be healthy and protected through polio campaigns. I do this job from my heart, going from house to house to make sure that no child is left behind,” says Faiza.Faiza is one of more than 413,000 frontline health workers trained and mobilized by the World Health Organization (WHO) in April to protect 45 million children from paralytic polio in Pakistan, under the leadership of the Government and with support from donors like the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia – through the King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Centre (KSrelief).From 13-19 April, as the Pakistan Polio Eradication Initiative (PEI) implemented its second nationwide polio vaccination campaign of 2026, polio workers like Faiza walked the length and breadth of the country to bring the life-saving polio vaccine to the doorsteps of every child, regardless of social or economic status, no matter where they live or who they are. Since the launch of Pakistan’s polio programme in 1994, thanks to the medical science behind vaccines, Pakistan has reduced polio cases by 99.8%, from an estimated 20,000 in the early 1990s to 31 in 2025 and 1 case so far in 2026. Global polio eradication experts agree that ending wild polio in Pakistan and worldwide is within reach, but only if all partners intensify the response, particularly in the 2 remaining endemic countries: Pakistan and Afghanistan.Polio worker Faiza administers polio drops in Taramari during the April 2026 national polio campaign in Pakistan. Photo credit: Hamid Inam/WHO PakistanLike Faiza, Saima – a former teacher – sees her work as a vaccinator as a personal commitment to protect every child in her community from a disease that can cause lifelong paralysis or death. “As a woman and as a mother, I get a lot of hope and internal satisfaction from this work. It is an act of service for me, vaccinating and protecting the children in my community from this terrible disease.”Saima’s 2-member team goes from house to house, visiting approximately 250 homes during each campaign.Polio worker Saima (centre) during the morning briefing before departing on a vaccination round in Islamabad, Pakistan, during the April 2026 national polio campaign. Photo credit: Hamid Inam/WHO PakistanAs a founding partner of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), WHO provides technical and operational assistance to Pakistan’s PEI. WHO supports Pakistan and partners in leading key components of the largest polio operation in the world, including science- and evidence-based vaccination campaigns, support for the largest and most sensitive poliovirus surveillance network globally, the training and deployment of polio workers – 60% of them women, outbreak responses, and the monitoring and evaluation of vaccination drives.Economic support provided by donors like KSrelief has been instrumental in ensuring WHO polio operations in Pakistan, while enabling economic support and community service.“I am very content to be working in the Polio programme because I am able to support my family while also protecting children from polio,” says polio vaccinator Hina.“Community health is an important part of my training as a student nurse, so I was motivated to be in the field, engaging directly with communities and promoting health. Being a polio worker and going door to door to vaccinate children is providing valuable field experience and the opportunity to serve the community, as well as income to cover my expenses,” says Waqar, who is completing his final year of nursing education and volunteers as a polio worker during vaccination campaigns.Polio workers like Faiza, Saima, Hina and Waqar are the backbone of polio eradication efforts in Pakistan, knocking on every door and visiting every family to leave no child behind. In their vaccine carriers, they bring hope, one drop at a time, for a polio-free Pakistan and a polio-free world.In 2026, WHO polio operations are being supported by the generous contributions of Pakistan, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Canada, Germany, the Gates Foundation and Rotary International.Written by Suzanna Masih.Edited by José Ignacio Martín Galán.
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Story
05 May 2026
Navigating remote Sindh to deliver life-saving vaccines in Pakistan
Islamabad, Pakistan – In the narrow, muddy lanes of Ghorabari, Sindh, Ali Muhammad’s motorbike brings hope and medical science to the most remote communities. Over the last two decades, Ali has been navigating this marginalized landscape, where accessing healthcare can be a daily struggle. Ali is one of over 15 000 skilled vaccinators trained by the World Health Organization (WHO) under the leadership of Pakistan’s Expanded Programme on Immunization.His mission: to ensure every child completes their full vaccination course, staying protected from vaccine-preventable diseases that could lead to lifelong disability or death.Vaccinator Ali on his motorbike, about to head to vaccination in a remote area in Sindh province, Pakistan. Photo credit: WHO PakistanDay after day, Ali fights a burden of diseases that particularly threatens communities living in makeshift houses far from health facilities.WHO’s collaboration with Pakistan and partners – supported by donors like Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance – provides the infrastructure, training, and tools needed to record the vaccination status of children and reach those living in the most isolated areas.Ali Muhammad with a vaccine carrier and safety box on his way to remote households in Ghorabari, Sindh. Photo credit: WHO PakistanWhether during the 2022 floods or the measles and rubella vaccination campaigns of 2022 and 2025, Ali was on the ground to provide a safety net for the most vulnerable. "I have seen real improvement because of vaccination," Ali says. "There are fewer outbreaks now, but our work must be consistent to keep children safe."Ali often encounters hesitation due to misinformation. He remembers one family who, fearing minor side effects like fever, chose to skip life-saving vaccines."We would get our children vaccinated sometimes, and other times we wouldn't," says Zohra, a mother in Ghorabari. This inconsistency turned fatal when her daughter fell ill. Mistaking her fever for a common chest infection, the parents waited. It was only when a rash appeared and they reached the hospital that the truth emerged: it was measles. The realization came too late; the young girl died the next day.Today, Zohra has transformed her grief into a plea: "My daughter is gone because I was careless. I let my doubts come before her safety, and now I have to live with that grief every day. I thought I was protecting her from a fever. I urge every mother: do not wait for a rash to appear, do not let your child become a memory; ensure they are vaccinated on time, every time."Zohra, a mother in Ghorabari, Sindh, advocates immunization after losing her daughter to a preventable measles outbreak. Photo credit: WHO PakistanAli vaccinates over 3500 children annually at the basic health unit and in outreach sites, but he is more than a vaccinator. He is also a counselor who shares the plight of parents like Zohra to break the cycle of refusal. Every morning, he prepares his vaccine carrier, safety box, and vaccines, heading out to reach every woman and child, no matter where they live or who they are."In this area, some people don’t have access to basic health facilities; my mission is to ensure that every child completes their full vaccination course, so they are safe and protected.Written by Ayesha Javed.Edited by José Ignacio Martín Galán.
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Story
29 April 2026
‘This work chose me’: Pakistan’s women vaccinators protecting millions on the frontlines
“I didn’t choose this work. This work chose me,” says Sanam, one of the more than 428 000 vaccinators – including 15 000 routine vaccinators and 413 000 polio workers – trained by the World Health Organization (WHO) in Pakistan. They brave distance and difficult terrain and overcome doubts to bring lifesaving medical science to their communities, protecting them against 13 vaccine-preventable diseases.Every year, they protect 7 million children and 5.5 million mothers with routine vaccines. Over 45 million children have been reached with polio vaccines during multiple supplementary campaigns.Many of these vaccinators are women who speak mother to mother, bridging cultural codes and going where others cannot. This World Immunization Week, we pay tribute to them.Meet Sanam, Laila, Rozina, Sagheera, Zeenat, Fatima, Ayesha, Shumaila, Deen-a-Komal and Amina, and learn how, across Pakistan’s provinces, they are proving that, for every generation, vaccines work and save lives.Sanam – Barakahu, Islamabad“When I was in college, I wanted to select a field where I could interact with people and with children – like this vaccination programme that protects children. I wanted to do something for children, as a vaccinator and as a mother.”Vaccinator Sanam prepares a routine immunization dose at the Rural Health Centre Barakahu, Islamabad, Pakistan, in April 2026. Photo credit: Sara Akmal/ WHO PakistanLaila – Muzaffargarh, Punjab“These are my villages, my children. I have walked through these fields in July heat and December fog. When you know a child is waiting, you don’t calculate the distance. You just go. Trust is a real medicine. The injection comes after,” says Laila.Vaccinator Laila walks through the fields of Muzaffargarh, Punjab, carrying a vaccine carrier and supplies to reach children in her community. Photo credit: WHO PakistanRozina – Thatta, Sindh“Some mothers walk very far to bring their children to me. When I see them coming, I never make them wait. There are mothers in this area who lost children to measles because they were not vaccinated on time. Vaccination is not just a choice. It is a responsibility we share.”Vaccinator Rozina prepares a vaccine dose at a community outreach session in, Thatta, Sindh, as mothers and children wait to be vaccinated. Photo credit: WHO PakistanSagheera – Kahuta, Punjab “For 25 years I have been coming to these hills. The children I vaccinated first are now bringing me their own children. That is all the reward I need.”Vaccinator Sagheera reviews vaccination cards with mothers and families during a community outreach visit in Kahuta, Punjab. Photo credit: WHO PakistanZeenat – Rawalpindi“I am a mother too and I got my own children vaccinated for polio. Thank God, they are healthy and protected now. I want all parents in the country to vaccinate their children with polio drops so they do not fall prey to paralysis.”Vaccinator Zeenat, accompanied by a WHO frontline worker, administers polio drops to a child at his doorstep in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, during a door-to-door immunization campaign in February 2026. Photo credit: Hamid Inam/WHO PakistanFatima – Thatta, Sindh“Every tetanus-diphtheria vaccine that we provide protects mothers and newborns from maternal and neonatal tetanus. I am proud to have played a part in eliminating this disease across Sindh.” Vaccinator Fatima administers a Td (tetanus-diphtheria) vaccine to a woman at a community outreach site in Thatta, Sindh, as part of Pakistan’s maternal and neonatal tetanus elimination programme. Photo credit: WHO PakistanAyesha – Tarlai, Islamabad“Every child, every missed dose is all in this register. This data are not just numbers. These are the children I am responsible for.”Vaccinator Ayesha presents her vaccination register to Dr Sania Nishtar, CEO of Gavi, during a visit to the Tarlai health facility in Islamabad in 2025. Photo credit: Ayesha Javed/WHO PakistanShumaila – Karachi, Sindh“The human papillomavirus (HPV) campaign (against cervical cancer) was challenging. I was not just vaccinating — I was convincing parents the vaccine was safe. Every girl on our list was a daughter, a sister, a future. It was our responsibility to protect her health.”Vaccinator Shumaila administers an HPV vaccine to a schoolgirl in Karachi, Sindh, during the national HPV campaign. Photo credit: Ayesha Javed/WHO PakistanDeen-a-Komal – Diamir District, Gilgit-Baltistan“In Diamir, people once turned us away at the door. Since15 women vaccinators were deployed here, coverage has risen from 57% to 83%. That change is what I worked for.”Vaccinator Deen-a-Komal at an outreach site during a measles and rubella campaign in November 2025 in Diamir District, Gilgit-Baltistan. Photo credit: WHO PakistanAmina Khan – Mehrabadi, Islamabad“A missed child does not disappear from my list. I follow up until I find them. A blank space in this register means a child is still at risk.”Vaccinator Amina updates vaccination records at a field outreach site in Mehrabadi, Islamabad. Photo credit: WHO Pakistan.Bridging the human distance to deliver medical scienceIn 1976, Pakistan was certified free of smallpox by WHO. In 1980, smallpox was officially declared eradicated worldwide, ending one of the deadliest diseases in human history. That success was achieved by health workers who walked through neighbourhoods, climbed into villages, and stayed until every eligible person was reached. Two years later, in 1978, Pakistan launched the Expanded Programme on Immunization in partnership with WHO. At the time, there were a limited presence of women vaccinators.Nearly 5 decades on, Pakistan has more women vaccinators than ever. They carry vaccines into the country’s hardest-to-reach corners with WHO technical and operational support – in collaboration with partners and with funding from donors like Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.These vaccinators continue to build on the hard-earned lesson that motivated the creation of the immunization programme 48 years ago: understanding that the distance between a vaccine and a child is always, in the end, a human distance, and that the medical science behind vaccines needs vaccinators to deliver it.Written by Ayesha Javed.Edited by José Ignacio Martín Galán
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Story
06 April 2026
Threading a New Path: Saeeda’s Journey from Isolation to Enterprise
In Union Council Churbandar, in Gwadar district, Saeeda’s days once revolved around quiet, repetitive work.At 39, widowed and raising two children, she relied on hand embroidery to sustain her household. Her work was careful and skilled, but it remained confined within her home. Without access to buyers, pricing knowledge, or regular orders, her monthly income fluctuated between PKR 10,000 and 15,000. It was uncertain, informal, and difficult to scale. “I used to do embroidery, but I did not know how to sell my work properly or get regular orders,” she recalls. Like many women in her community, Saeeda’s challenge was not a lack of skill. It was the absence of a pathway to turn that skill into a stable livelihood.That began to change with the establishment of the Women Resource Centre (WRC) in Churbandar under the Gwadar Lasbela Livelihoods Support Project, financed by Government of Pakistan and the International Dund for Agricultural Development (IFAD). Designed as a safe and accessible space, the centre brought women together to learn, work, and exchange knowledge. For Saeeda, it marked her first step out of isolation.Through the centre, she participated in Enterprise Development Training, where she learned advanced embroidery techniques, product finishing, business planning, and basic financial management. More importantly, she began to understand how her work could connect to a wider market.The shift was not immediate, but it was steady.At the WRC, women were encouraged to organise into enterprise groups. Saeeda joined others with similar skills, and for the first time, her work became part of a collective process. Tasks were shared across embroidery, stitching, finishing, and packaging. Products that once took months to complete could now be produced more efficiently and with consistent quality. With support from the centre, she also began receiving orders from local markets and women-led online networks, including through WhatsApp. Her customer base expanded, and her pricing improved.Today, Saeeda earns approximately PKR 35,000 a month. The increase in income has brought stability to her household, but the change is not only financial.“After my husband passed away, I was broken and afraid… The Women Resource Centre gave me skills, confidence, and direction. Today, I can support my children with dignity and hope.” The centre has also reshaped how women in the community engage with work and with each other. It provides a space where they can move beyond home-based, informal production into structured, market-oriented activities, while building confidence and decision-making capacity.Saeeda’s experience reflects a broader shift underway across Gwadar and Lasbela districts. Under the project, women are not peripheral participants but a central focus. They make up more than half of the membership in community organisations, and the majority of productive assets and training opportunities are directed towards them. This approach is supported through a network of Women Resource Centres, designed to anchor skills development, enterprise formation, and market engagement at the local level. The results are visible beyond individual households. Across the project area, there has been a marked decline in the proportion of ultra-poor households earning below PKR 10,000, alongside a rise in households moving into higher income brackets. These trends indicate a gradual but measurable shift from subsistence to more stable livelihoods.At the same time, the process is still evolving. Building enterprise groups, strengthening market linkages, and sustaining local institutions such as WRCs requires time and continued engagement. For Saeeda, however, the direction is already clear.What began as solitary work within the confines of her home has grown into a more structured livelihood, connected to markets and supported by a network of women facing similar challenges. In that transition lies not only increased income, but a redefinition of what is possible.
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Story
12 March 2026
From Risk to Relief: Transforming Medical Waste Management in Pakistan
Many district and tehsil hospitals across Pakistan face a serious but often overlooked problem: the safe disposal of hazardous medical waste. Used syringes, blood-soaked bandages, and other infectious materials are generated every day, yet proper disposal systems are either outdated or unavailable. In some cases, waste is stored for long periods, handled manually, or disposed of in ways that put hospital staff, waste handlers, patients, and nearby communities at risk. The absence of reliable incineration facilities creates a critical gap in the healthcare system, directly affecting both public health and environmental safety.To address this challenge, with support from the Global Fund and in coordination with the Common Management Unit (CMU) of the Ministry of Health Services, Regulations & Coordination (MoHSRC), UNOPS, under its “Developing Infrastructure for Incinerator Installation” project, has successfully constructed facilities in seven district hospitals across different provinces. The medical waste incinerators were procured by UNOPS Geneva office and have been installed in four hospitals as of now, including Tehsil Headquarter (THQ) Hospital, Muridke, Punjab; Institute of Chest Diseases (ICD), Kotri, Sindh; Civil Hospital, Mithi, Sindh; and Teaching Hospital, Khuzdar, Balochistan. The next installation is planned at Teaching Hospital, Turbat. Two sites are currently under construction, and work on the remaining three sites will begin in the next few weeks. Built according to international safety standards, with cavity walls and a properly designed ventilation system to ensure safe and controlled operation. Each installed incinerator can dispose of up to 150 kilograms of medical waste per hour, enabling hospitals to manage their waste efficiently, safely, and securely on-site.The impact goes beyond the structure itself. Staff at all these hospitals have received hands-on operational training, including live demonstrations of the full incineration cycle and safe waste-handling procedures. With four incinerators now operational as of now , they will significantly reduce infection risks for patients and surrounding communities, protect waste handlers from injury, and prevent harmful pollutants from entering the environment.“The installation of the incinerator at THQ Hospital Muridke marks a major step forward in safely managing infectious medical waste within the hospital. This initiative not only protects our healthcare workers but also safeguards our patients, the surrounding community, and the entire population of Muridke.”Dr. Ahmed Ammar Asif, Medical Superintendent, THQ Hospital Muridke This initiative demonstrates UNOPS’ strong expertise in infrastructure development and procurement globally, particularly in complex and high-challenge environments. By delivering safe, standards-compliant facilities and building local capacity, UNOPS is helping to strengthen Pakistan’s healthcare system in a practical and lasting way. The impact goes beyond waste disposal. It means safer hospitals for patients, improved working conditions for healthcare staff, and healthier communities. This project closes a long-standing gap in the health system and contributes directly to better health outcomes and responsible waste management for the future.
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Press Release
09 June 2026
Media Update: United Nations Pakistan, 5 June 2026
Islamabad, 3 June 2026: The fourth edition of the Pakistan Gender Climate Award (GCA) culminated in an awards ceremony at Serena Hotel, Islamabad, recognizing two exceptional women leaders for their contributions to climate action and environmental stewardship. The 2026 edition attracted a record 352 applications from across Pakistan, reflecting the growing momentum of women-led climate initiatives nationwide.Established by the Embassy of France in 2023, the Pakistan Gender Climate Award celebrates women whose leadership, innovation, and commitment are helping communities confront climate challenges, strengthen resilience, and advance sustainable development. Since its inception, the initiative has recognized ten women climate champions, providing visibility, support, and inspiration for women driving climate solutions across the country.The 2026 Gender Climate Award was presented to Dr. Zillay Mariam Sohail for her pioneering work in transforming waste into sustainable value chains and promoting circular economy solutions, and to Ms. Songul Jamal for her leadership in marine ecosystem conservation and environmental awareness among coastal communities. Each awardee received a cash prize of PKR 1 million in recognition of their achievements and impact.The ceremony was attended by distinguished representatives from government, development partners, civil society, academia, media, and the diplomatic community.In her Opening keynote, Senator Sherry Rehman highlighted the critical role of women in addressing climate challenges and advancing resilient development pathways. She pointed out that, “Women are not only effected by climate change but also play a key role in responding to it and despite social and economic challenges lead emergency response and recovery efforts to drive positive change.”Federal Secretary for Climate Change and Environmental Coordination, Aisha Moriani, commended the Embassy of France and partner organizations for championing women's leadership in climate action. “The role of women is very visible in society. Women are participating very actively to address the integrated challenges of climate change and are not just facing the impact but are part of the solution,” she said.The event featured two panel discussions, moderated by Ambassador Nadeem Riyaz and senior journalist Arifa Noor, senior journalist at Dawn, exploring opportunities, challenges, and pathways for strengthening women's participation in climate leadership and decision-making across PakistanIn his inaugural address, H.E. Nicolas Galey, Ambassador of France to Pakistan, emphasized the importance of recognizing and investing in women as agents of climate resilience and sustainable development. He stated that “France’s foreign policy set at the fore front of its action both the promotion of gender equality and climate action. We were one of the first countries to enact a feminist diplomacy in 2019. Our 2025/2030 strategy of feminist diplomacy clearly acknowledges that climate change and related disasters disproportionately affect women.”Dr. Samuel Rizk, Resident Representative, UNDP Pakistan, underscored the need for inclusive and equitable climate action, adding that, "The women we honor today already know the data, the impact, the statistics, and certainly know the differentiated toll climate change and environmental degradation has on women and girls and the community at the large. In fact, they have already taken action."The Pakistan Gender Climate Award is supported by the Embassy of France, the French Development Agency (AFD), the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the Pakistan Poverty Alleviation Fund (PPAF), UN Women, and the Aga Khan Foundation (AKF), and is implemented by the Civil Society Coalition for Climate Change (CSCCC).In her remarks Aisha Khan (CSCCC) said, “As climate risks continue to intensify, the Pakistan Gender Climate Award serves as an important platform for amplifying the voices of women and inspiring a new generation of changemakers working towards a more resilient and sustainable future”.
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Press Release
09 June 2026
Media Update: United Nations Pakistan, 4 June 2026
Islamabad, 4 June 2026 – The Government of Pakistan, through the Prime Minister’s Youth Programme (PMYP), in partnership with UNICEF and Generation Unlimited (GenU), launched Pur Azm Pakistan, a national platform designed to expand access to skills, employment, entrepreneurship, and economic opportunities for young people.“Pakistan’s young people represent the country’s greatest strength and opportunity,” said Rana Mashhood Ahmad Khan, Chairman of the Prime Minister’s Youth Programme. “Through Pur Azm, we are building a coordinated national system that connects education, skills and employment. This reflects our commitment to ensuring that every young person can access meaningful pathways to opportunity and contribute to national growth and prosperity.”Pakistan is home to one of the world’s largest youth populations, with nearly 67 per cent of its population under age 30. Yet an estimated 32 million young people are not in education, employment or training. Pur Azm seeks to address this challenge by bringing together government, the private sector, development partners and young people to expand pathways to skills development, employment and entrepreneurship, particularly for girls and young people from underserved communities.“Pakistan has a historic opportunity to turn its youth population into a powerful demographic dividend by enabling pathways from learning to earning at scale,” said Pernille Ironside, UNICEF Representative in Pakistan. “Pur Azm Pakistan is a transformative step towards building the systems and partnerships needed to expand skills and economic opportunity for all young people, especially those facing the greatest barriers.”The launch also marked the establishment of Friends of GenU Pakistan, a platform that brings together businesses committed to investing in the future of Pakistan's young people. Through partnerships that support skills development, entrepreneurship, innovation and work-based learning, the platform will help expand opportunities for young people to successfully transition from education to employment.“Pur Azm Pakistan and Friends of GenU Pakistan demonstrate how government, business and young people can come together to build a scalable model for skills, entrepreneurship and employment, positioning the country as a global leader in unlocking youth potential for inclusive economic growth,” said Kevin Frey, Chief Executive Officer of Generation Unlimited.The launch featured a Learn-to-Earn Marketplace, showcasing youth-led enterprises, innovations and entrepreneurship solutions from across Pakistan, highlighting the talent, creativity and potential of young people. A high-level dialogue on “Bridging Ambition and Opportunity” brought together policymakers, private sector leaders and young people to explore pathways to digital employment, green economy opportunities, skills reform, and entrepreneurship.Pur Azm and Friends of GenU Pakistan will expand pathways to skills, employment and entrepreneurship for young people across the country. Together, they aim to help millions of young people successfully transition from learning to earning and contribute to Pakistan’s future growth and prosperity.About UNICEF
UNICEF works in some of the world's toughest places, to reach the world's most disadvantaged children. Across more than 190 countries and territories, we work for every child, everywhere, to build a better world for everyone. For more information about UNICEF’s work in Pakistan, visit: https://www.unicef.org/pakistan/ For further information, please contact:Amina Sarwar, UNICEF Pakistan,Email: amsarwar@unicef.org , Tel: +92 312 5190 383
UNICEF works in some of the world's toughest places, to reach the world's most disadvantaged children. Across more than 190 countries and territories, we work for every child, everywhere, to build a better world for everyone. For more information about UNICEF’s work in Pakistan, visit: https://www.unicef.org/pakistan/ For further information, please contact:Amina Sarwar, UNICEF Pakistan,Email: amsarwar@unicef.org , Tel: +92 312 5190 383
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Press Release
09 June 2026
Media Update-3: United Nations Pakistan, 5 June 2026
The initiative promoted collective action to address plastic pollution while highlighting the need for safer work, greater inclusion and improved livelihoods for workers engaged in waste collection and recycling.ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (ILO News) – Stakeholders at a World Environment Day event in Islamabad called for stronger recycling systems that protect the environment while promoting safer work, greater inclusion and improved livelihoods for waste workers. The event was organized by the International Labour Organization (ILO), in collaboration with the Islamabad Wildlife Management Board (IWMB) and the Ministry of Climate Change and Environmental Coordination (MoCC&EC), through a Sustainability Awareness Hike and Cleanup Campaign at Trail 5 in the Margalla Hills.Organized under the ILO’s Waste to Worth: Promoting Sustainability and Decent Work in the PET Recycling Value Chain project, jointly implemented by the ILO and United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS) with support from The Coca-Cola Foundation, the initiative highlighted the importance of responsible waste management, recycling and the role of waste workers in advancing environmental sustainability. The event also brought together representatives from government, workers’ organisations, civil society, environmental groups and young people.Plastic pollution remains a major global challenge affecting communities, ecosystems and livelihoods around the world. In Pakistan, an estimated 3.12 million tonnes of plastic waste are generated annually, underscoring the need for stronger waste management systems and greater public awareness.Waste workers play a critical role in supporting recycling systems, recovering materials that might otherwise end up in drains, rivers, open spaces and landfills. Yet many workers engaged in waste collection and recycling continue to operate informally and often lack adequate occupational safety and health protection, stable incomes, social protection and representation, despite their essential contribution to the circular economy.Geir Tonstol, Country Director of ILO Pakistan, emphasized the importance of linking environmental sustainability with decent work. “Plastic waste is not only an environmental challenge. It is also a livelihoods issue. Behind every bottle collected and recycled are workers whose contribution helps keep valuable materials in circulation and supports a cleaner environment. A green transition cannot be truly sustainable if it leaves workers behind. Strengthening recycling systems must go hand in hand with improving the safety, inclusion and recognition of the workers who make them possible.”Coordinator to the Prime Minister on Climate Change, Ms. Romina Khurshid Alam, highlighted the importance of recognizing waste workers as key contributors to environmental sustainability and Pakistan’s transition towards a circular economy. “Waste workers are essential environmental actors. If we want cleaner cities and a stronger circular economy, we must build systems that value their contribution, protect their dignity and ensure that recyclable materials are recovered responsibly,” she said.The event featured an awareness hike and cleanup activity along Trail 5, distribution of personal protective equipment and waste collection bags, a symbolic handover of a three-bin waste segregation system, and a tree plantation activity aimed at encouraging environmentally responsible practices.The Waste to Worth: Promoting Sustainability and Decent Work in the PET Recycling Value Chain project supports environmentally sustainable and socially responsible plastic waste management in Islamabad. By strengthening PET recycling systems, promoting occupational safety and health, encouraging waste segregation and recycling practices, and advancing the inclusion of waste workers, the project seeks to contribute to a cleaner environment while creating safer and more decent work opportunities in the recycling sector.For further information please contact:Muhammad NumanCommunication OfficerEmail: numan@ilo.orgMobile: +92 303 5000041
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Press Release
09 June 2026
Media Advisory: Media Briefing and Networking Lunch - World Day Against Child Labour
When: Thursday, 11 June 2026 at 11:00 a.m.Where: ILO Building, Near State Bank, G-5/2, Islamabad.What: An estimated 8.6 million children in Pakistan are engaged in child labour.Ahead of World Day Against Child Labour, join us for an informal discussion with Geir Tonstol, Country Director of the International Labour Organization (ILO) in Pakistan, on the latest child labour situation in the country and the collective efforts needed to end it.The session will provide an opportunity to discuss key findings, challenges and progress in addressing child labour, as well as the ILO's work with government, employers' and workers' organizations, and development partners.Following brief opening remarks, journalists will have the opportunity to engage directly with the Country Director during an open Q&A session.Who:Geir Thomas Tonstol, Country Director for ILO PakistanLunch and refreshments will be served.RSVP by 10 June 2026 to:Muhammad Numan, Communication OfficerEmail: numan@ilo.org, Mobile: +92 303 5000041Please note that only registered participants will have access to the event.
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Press Release
09 June 2026
UNIC - MEDIA ADVISORY ( Revised)
WHEN: Thursday, 11 June 2026 at 4:30 pm ( Revised Date & Time) WHERE: Level 7 Conference room, Serena Business Complex, Khayaban-e-Suhrawardy, Sector G-5/1, Islamabad WHAT: The UN Independent Expert on the rights of persons with albinism, Muluka-Anne Miti-Drummond, will visit Pakistan from 3 to 12 June 2026 to review legislative and policy developments and challenges faced by persons with albinism.During her visit, she will meet with government officials, relevant institutions, civil society, activists, albinism-specific organisations and persons with albinism in Islamabad, Karachi, Dadu, Jacobabad, Lahore and Sahiwal.The Independent Expert will hold a press conference at the conclusion of her visit. Access will be limited to journalists.WHO: Muluka-Anne Miti-Drummond - UN Independent Expert on the rights of persons with albinism For RSVP:Mahvash Haider Ali, 0319-0712828, mahvash.ali@un.orgKainat Afridi, 0300-8569761, Kainat.afridi@un.org
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16 April 2026
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