ISLAMABAD: Commuters make their way along a motorway as they enter Pakistan’s capital city Islamabad. Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan announced his government would end several months of coronavirus restrictions. — AFP

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has recorded more than 100,000 cases of coronavirus, health authorities said Monday, as hospitals warned they are running out of beds to treat patients. Pakistan - and neighbors India and Afghanistan - have lagged behind Western nations in virus tolls, but experts warn a lack of testing or accurate reporting in rural areas could be hiding true figures.  In recent weeks, however, the country of more than 210 million has reported a sharp rise in new infections, and on Monday the government said more than 100,000 cases and 2,000 deaths had now been recorded. Last week a leaked government report suggested there were nearly 700,000 infections in Lahore alone. 

Doctors at several main hospitals in the historic eastern city told AFP they were running out of beds, ventilators and other vital equipment.  “As the cases increase, more health care workers are also falling victim to the virus,” said Farooq Sahil, a doctor at Services Hospital Lahore. Khizer Hayat, chairman of the Young Doctors Association of Punjab, said facilities across the province needed help. “Hospitals are running out of beds; there aren’t enough ventilators given to us,” he told AFP. In the southern port city of Karachi, health centers are turning away the sick, with a large sign near the entrance of the Indus hospital stating there was no room for coronavirus patients.

Prime Minister Imran Khan on Monday said he expected the virus to peak “towards the end of July, followed by a gradual downslide”. Pakistan’s lockdown policy has been patchy at best, with Khan reluctant to call a nationwide shutdown in order to protect the economy. Asad Umar, who heads the national coronavirus task force, announced that a package to relieve pressure on hospitals would include 1,000 new beds in major cities.  “The crisis is unfolding now as we have ceased to observe isolation,” said Sikander Ali Memon, who is leading Sindh province’s anti-virus efforts. In southwestern Balochistan province, government spokesman Liaqat Shahwani told AFP the situation was serious, and authorities were struggling to cope.— AFP