Pakistan Today

Polio drive to continue despite attacks on workers: WHO

World Health Organisation’s (WHO) Polio drive head Dr Bruce Aylward on Friday said it was crucial to push on with the fight to eradicate the disease despite the rising death toll among vaccination workers.

A Pakistani policeman was shot dead earlier this week while protecting a polio team, police said, bringing the number of deaths in such attacks in Pakistan to 20 since December.

Speaking in Australia, Aylward said the WHO was working to reduce risk factors for those involved in the work to tackle the crippling illness in countries such as Pakistan. “It’s a horrible tragedy. As you can imagine, it’s something very personal, the pain you feel for families that lose people in the course of a programme that you are actually in-charge of,” he said.

“(But) every time it does happen… invariably the people come back and say to us that this makes finishing the job much more important,” he said. The umbrella Taliban faction in Pakistan last year banned polio vaccinations in the tribal region of Waziristan, alleging it was a cover for espionage. Rumours about vaccines being a plot to sterilise Muslims have also dogged efforts to tackle the highly infectious disease in Pakistan, one of three countries along with Nigeria and Afghanistan where polio remains endemic.

Last month gunmen stormed two clinics where polio vaccination workers had gathered in Nigeria, killing at least 10 people, prompting the government there to vow to press on with the eradication programme.

Aylward said the violent reactions had occurred as health workers moved into areas that had been long neglected, and in many instances were not experiencing polio outbreaks at the time. “This is an incredible landscape for suspicion and conspiracy theories,” he said.

“And it also provides an incredible opportunity for people who want to embarrass the government or play out a political agenda which is really what’s happened,” he added.

Aylward said it was important to push on with the programme because it was the low season for polio after it peaked at the end of the calendar year, and this year there were unusually low levels of the disease around.

“This is the Achilles heel of the virus right now so it would be really unfortunate to have to stop at this time-but at the same time we won’t do something stupid,” he stated.

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