Arab News

Polio vaccinatio­n suspended after killing

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PESHAWAR: Pakistani authoritie­s suspended a polio vaccinatio­n program yesterday after gunmen shot dead a female polio worker and wounded another, officials said, in a blow to the UN-backed campaign aimed at eradicatin­g the crippling disease from this violence-torn country.

Such attacks have made it harder for Pakistan to join the vast majority of nations declared polio-free.

The two women were attacked yesterday in Kaggawala village on the outskirts of the main northwest city of Peshawar, police officer Mushtaq Khan said.

Senior police official Shafiullah Khan said two attackers on foot fired a pistol at the workers. He said police have started a search operation.

Government official Habibullah Arif said the polio vaccinatio­n drive in the northweste­rn city of Peshawar and nearby villages gas been suspended.

The four-day campaign was launched yesterday morning, but it was halted “for security reasons and to express solidarity with the slain and injured female polio workers,” he said.

No group has claimed responsibi­lity for the latest killing, but some Pakistani militants have alleged in the past that the polio workers are US spies and that the vaccine makes people sterile.

Reinforcin­g those suspicions was the disclosure that the CIA used a Pakistani doctor to run a hepatitis vaccinatio­n campaign to try to get blood samples from Al-Qaeda founder Osama Bin Laden’s family before US commandos killed him there in May 2011.

The World Health Organizati­on, the UN agency that oversees much of the polio vaccinatio­n work in Pakistan, condemned the attack.

Dr. Nima Saeed Abid, acting WHO country head for Pakistan, said the safety of his polio workers, many of whom are women, was paramount.

“I hope the government will provide them with the requested security for the health workers,” he said. “And after careful assessment, they should resume their activities.” Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari blasted what he called a “cowardly” attack, and resolved that “the government will not permit militants to deprive our children of basic health care.” He spoke before the decision to suspend the program.

Such attacks have made it harder for Pakistan to join the vast majority of nations declared polio-free.

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