WASHINGTON: The US State Department assured the Pakistan embassy on Friday that a comatose Pakistani student will get the visa he needs for continuing his treatment in a Minnesota hospital.

But doctors treating the 20-year-old student, Shahzaib Bajwa, feel that he has moved from the stage of an acute or intensive care to a long-term care. Now Mr Bajwa’s family and his physicians need to decide whether he should get that care at a hospital in the US or in Pakistan.

“The State Department has assured us that visa is not an issue,” Ambassador Jalil Abbas Jilani told Dawn.

“The decision has to be taken by his doctors and his family.”

A US State Department spokesman, Mark Thornburg, also told reporters in Washington that Mr Bajwa will get whatever support he needs.

“Our hearts go out to the injured student and his family during this difficult time,” Mr Thornburg said.

“His future treatment involves a number of factors that the family must weigh, and we are making every effort to offer as much flexibility as possible in maintaining his status while the family considers their options,” he said.

Hospital and embassy sources say that when the family first learned about Mr Bajwa’s medical condition, they agreed to take him back to Pakistan but later changed their mind.

“We respect their decision and are doing whatever we can to facilitate their stay in the US,” Ambassador Jilani said.

On Thursday, the embassy asked the State Department to issue a medical visa to Mr Bajwa to facilitate his treatment. His student visa expires on Feb. 28.

Mr Bajwa, an anthropology student at the University of Wisconsin-Superior, was injured on Nov 13 when his vehicle hit a deer on a highway. He was first taken to a community hospital in Cloquet, Minnesota, where he went into cardiac arrest and was transferred to Essentia Health-St. Mary’s Medical Centre. He has been in coma ever since.

Since Mr Bajwa came to the US as an exchange student, he was insured for a semester and the insurance company, Essentia Health, paid $100,000 for his treatment, although his total medical bills exceeded $350,000.

Essentia Health-St. Mary’s Medical Centre waived the rest of the bill and has also offered to pay for an air-ambulance to take Mr Bajwa to Pakistan and for the doctor who will accompany him.

The hospital has already contacted the Al Shifa hospital in Islamabad and has offered to donate $90,000 for his treatment in Pakistan as well.

The Pakistan embassy has also launched a fund for Mr Bajwa’s treatment and urged the Pakistani-American community to help raise money for his treatment.

Opinion

Strategic confusion

Strategic confusion

There is a perception that, more than a backlash from the masses over unpopular decisions, the establishment is apprehensive of the historical factor.

Editorial

March to war?
Updated 22 Feb, 2026

March to war?

With his huge build-up of forces around Iran, and frequent threats targeted at the Islamic Republic, the US president has created a very difficult situation for himself.
Paper proscriptions
22 Feb, 2026

Paper proscriptions

THE Punjab government’s decision to publicly list 89 banned and unregistered groups, and to warn citizens against...
Cricket politics again
Updated 22 Feb, 2026

Cricket politics again

Pakistan refused to play India at the ongoing T20 World Cup and only changed its mind in view of the game’s greater good. It is time for India to reciprocate.
BoP meets
Updated 21 Feb, 2026

BoP meets

Trump told the meeting that “we will help Gaza”. So far no help has been visible.
Out on the streets
21 Feb, 2026

Out on the streets

IT had been in the offing for a long time but the latest controversy proved too much for Tariq Hussain Bugti to ...
Karachi tragedy
21 Feb, 2026

Karachi tragedy

APPALLNG firefighting facilities, lax regulations and an uncaring provincial government fan the flames of tragedy in...