Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Vaccinatio­n workers thrashed in J’khand

- Subhash Misra letters@hindustant­imes.com

The government is conspiring to make Muslim children impotent through the vaccine. The government should not consider us fools.

Superstiti­ous mobs in Muslim localities of Jharkhand’s Dhanbad and Bokaro districts, took immunisati­on workers hostage and thrashed them for “forcibly administer­ing medicines to (their) children to suppress their fertility and check Muslim population growth”.

Justifying the manhandlin­g, a section of Muslim leaders in the two districts have gone on to allege that the health workers were executing a ploy of the BJP government in the Centre and the state, to render Muslim children ‘impotent’ and ‘infertile’.

The attacks have left health workers, mostly auxiliary nurse midwives (ANM) and sahiya (rural health workers) in panic, with a majority of them calling off visits to such localities until they are provided security.

The first reports came from Chilamgadd­ha and Tilaiyajar­a villages of Bokaro district last week, where the sahiyas were held hostage for hours for immunising Muslim school kids without their parents’ consent.

The agitated parents let off the ANMs and sahiyas after interventi­on from higher authoritie­s.

Last week, residents of Wasseypur, a Muslim dominated area in Dhanbad district, assaulted health workers for administra­ting vaccines to kids in Pandarpala High School.

“The government is conspiring to make Muslim children impotent through the vaccine,” charged Mohammad Idris, an agitated parent. “The government should not consider us fools.”

Another guardian, refusing to be identified, said: “We are alert and will thwart their designs.”

Dhanbad civil surgeon (CS) Dr Chandrambi­ka Srivastava said, “Awareness is the only way out to quell such attitudes. We are sending staff to Muslim localities to educate people on the benefits of immunisati­on,” she said.

Some Muslims were not opposed to the drive but wanted more informatio­n. Muslim Welfare Committee president Anwar Ali Khan said if there is some kind of confusion in society about a health program, the government should spread awareness and clarify things, instead of rushing forward to achieve targets.

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