The Minister for Planning, Development and Special Initiatives was speaking to senior journalists when he announced the development.
"Vaccinating the population has always been a priority. We began a phased-wise approach in the beginning [and are now expanding it]," Umar said.
He said that vaccination of people aged 50 will begin "in a few days".
The minister also spoke of Pakistan getting in touch with Russia to procure its Sputnik V vaccine on a government level. "We are waiting for a response from them," he said.
Umar termed the coming five to six weeks "critical" in Pakistan's battle against the ongoing third coronavirus wave.
Speaking of vaccinations carried out so far, he said that 1.1 million people had been inoculated via the government's vaccination programme, whereas 14,000 people had received a jab through the private sector.
He said that China is the "primary source" of the vaccines Pakistan has been getting, and now after Sinopharm, the CanSino vaccine will also be available after Eid.
"We will be able to vaccinate more than 125,000 people per day after Eid," Umar said.
The minister, expressed concern over the rising number of patients requiring critical care, which he said number even more than those reported in the first coronavirus wave.
"Strict enforcement of SOPs (standard operating procedures) can bring down the rising rate of infection," he stressed.
Registrations are currently open for all those aged 50 and above, besides healthcare workers. The government has also decided to offer Islamabad and Punjab citizens over 80 to get vaccinated at home.
Pakistan reported 5,329 new coronavirus cases in the last 24 hours. In the same period, 98 people lost their lives to COVID-19.
The number of infections is the highest witnessed this year and the second highest since June 20, 2020 last year 6,604 cases were recorded.
The national positivity ratio stands at 10.7%.
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