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Over 85,000 people bitten by stray dogs in Sindh this year so far, CM told

May 26, 2026
Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah presides over a meeting at CM House to launch a province-wide Rabies Prevention Campaign aimed at eliminating preventable rabies deaths on May 25, 2026. — Facebook@SindhCMHouse
Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah presides over a meeting at CM House to launch a province-wide Rabies Prevention Campaign aimed at eliminating preventable rabies deaths on May 25, 2026. — Facebook@SindhCMHouse

More than 85,000 people, many of them being women and children, were bitten and mauled by stray dogs across Sindh in just the first four months of 2026, exposing the scale of the province’s worsening rabies and stray dog crisis.

The alarming statistics were presented to Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah on Monday who announced a province-wide anti rabies campaign and declared zero tolerance for preventable deaths due to rabies.

Official figures presented during a high-level meeting chaired by the CM revealed that 85,891 dog bite cases were reported across Sindh between January and April this year, averaging more than 700 dog attacks every day.

The meeting was informed that over 285,000 dog bite cases had been reported in Sindh during 2025, highlighting the rapidly growing burden of stray dog attacks in urban and rural areas of the province.

Sindh Senior Minister for Information and Transport Sharjeel Inam Memon, Health Minister Dr Azra Pechuho, Local Government Minister Syed Nasir Hussain Shah, Chief Secretary Asif Hyder Shah, Health Director General Dr Waqar Memon, PPHI CEO Javed Jagirani, Health Secretary Tahir Sangi, senior bureaucrats and representatives from the Indus Hospital attended the meeting.

Describing rabies as a deadly but preventable disease, Murad said no citizen should die because of delayed treatment, shortage of vaccines or lack of access to rabies immunoglobulin.

“We are adopting a zero tolerance policy on preventable rabies deaths,” the CM announced as he directed all the health facilities to ensure uninterrupted availability of anti-rabies vaccine and immunoglobulin.

Officials informed the meeting that 278 rabies prevention units and 112 referral centres had been established across Sindh to manage dog bite victims and provide emergency treatment. The health department said more than 63,000 dog bite victims had already received anti-rabies vaccination while over 8,700 patients had been administered eRIG treatment.

Despite these measures, the extraordinarily high number of dog bite incidents raised serious concerns about the effectiveness of stray dog control operations, particularly in densely populated urban centres and impoverished rural districts where children were often among the worst affected victims.

Murad directed the authorities to ensure that no patient was denied treatment because of shortage of medicines, vaccines or healthcare facilities. He also ordered the launch of a province-wide anti rabies awareness campaign involving the health department, local government institutions, rescue services, schools, media organisations and civil society groups.

The meeting was informed that a seven-day awareness campaign had already been launched through television, print media, social media and educational institutions. It was also said that an ARV patient tracking system was being developed for real time monitoring of dog bite cases, vaccinations and follow up doses across Sindh.

The CM appreciated the technology-based surveillance initiative and said faster response and monitoring systems were essential for saving lives. Officials briefed the meeting that stray dog sterilisation and vaccination campaigns were under way in 20 districts of Sindh under what authorities described as a humane and scientific strategy.

So far, over 25,500 stray dogs had been sterilised, while more than 36,900 dogs had been vaccinated against rabies, the meeting was told. Dr Azra informed the participants that 11 additional rabies control centres would soon become operational to improve treatment access for dog bite victims.

The CM also paid tribute to renowned infectious diseases expert Dr Naseem Salahuddin, who died recently in Morocco, for her lifelong struggle against rabies and said her efforts for a rabies-free Pakistan would continue to inspire public health authorities.