A child is vaccinated against polio as part of a vaccination programme at the Dodowa new town health outreach point in Dodowa, April 25, 2012. – Photo by Reuters.

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A child is vaccinated against polio as part of a vaccination programme at the Dodowa new town health outreach point in Dodowa, April 25, 2012. – Photo by Reuters.

MIRANSHAH: Pakistan on Monday postponed a polio immunisation campaign in parts of its tribal belt, jeopardising the health of more than 350,000 children after the Taliban banned inoculations.

Local Taliban and Pakistani warlord Hafiz Gul Bahadur, whose followers are fighting Western troops in Afghanistan, banned the vaccinations in the northwestern region of Waziristan to protest against US drone attacks.

They have condemned the immunisation campaign, which began nationwide on Monday, as a cover for espionage.

Pakistani doctor Shakeel Afridi was jailed for 33 years in May after helping the CIA find Osama bin Laden using a hepatitis vaccination programme as cover.

Fighting between government troops and local warlord Mangal Bagh also made it difficult to inoculate all children in Khyber district, officials said.

“The campaign has been postponed in North and South Waziristan and Bara (district) of Khyber,” Mazhar Nisar, in charge of the polio monitoring cell at the prime minister's secretariat, told AFP.

Officials in Miranshah, the main town of North Waziristan, said a meeting of tribal elders to discuss immunisation had been postponed due to a military curfew.

In Khyber, administration official Irfanullah Wazir told AFP that the target was to vaccinate 200,163 children, but conceded the campaign would be affected in parts of Bara and the Tirah valley, where 111,556 children need the drops.

“We will make every effort to reach the maximum children in those areas, with the help of security forces and lashkars (pro-government tribal militias),” Wazir said.

Fawad Khan, director of health services in the tribal belt, told AFP last week that at least 160,000 children in North Waziristan and 80,000 in South Waziristan would be affected if polio drops are not administered.

Pakistan says 34 million children under five will be targeted in the three-day polio immunisation campaign from Monday to Wednesday.

The prime minister's office said 22 vaccination points had been established on the Afghan-Pakistani border, but expected that a “substantial proportion” of children in Bara, South and North Waziristan would not be accessed.

The Lancet medical journal has said vaccination problems led last year to Pakistan's highest number of polio cases in a decade, 198, compared to 144 in 2010.

Polio remains endemic only in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Nigeria.

The highly infectious disease affects mainly the under-fives and can cause paralysis in a matter of hours. Some cases can be fatal.


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Comments (13)

@SecularPakista1
July 16, 2012 2:39 pm
Even if some here are against vaccinations for these helpless children cuught in between two political idealogies, they dont have an alternative to this vaccination. Does the Taliban have a better idea, besides blowing up clinics, killing medical staff, teachers and others who are trying to help their children?
Bakul
July 16, 2012 2:32 pm
The task which should have been done by Pakistan Intelligence, was carried out by US. Why do people see US and Dr. Afridi as villains and OBL as hero? When will people stop blaming external factors for their fate?
Thinker
July 16, 2012 1:24 pm
Well....these are the affects of US intelligence work for OBL....they used Shakeel Afridi under cover for polio vaccines, they too should be held responsible for the poor children who wont be able to get the vaccine. Our newspapers don't have the courage to post headlines similar to "US's OBL adventure giving rise to polio".
VGP
July 16, 2012 12:35 pm
Though I have no love or respect for the taliban or the pakis, I would not like to curse innocent children to suffer for life for no fault of theirs
Pappu Shah
July 16, 2012 12:29 pm
Were you born that sick or folks around you forced you to be so!
Ali S
July 16, 2012 12:23 pm
What a sick, twisted person you are - children aren't born to kill. The most realistic outcome of this debacle will be that Pakistanis will be banned from traveling abroad - we are only of only 3 nations on Earth where polio is still endemic. So DEFINITELY NOT a good thing.
parsa
July 16, 2012 11:30 am
there are concerns about iatrogenic polio from oral vaccines (but not inactive polio vaccines)... so there are questions. every country should do their own research and find out what works and what doesnt in their own surroundings. India de-fluoridates their water in the salt range areas (by a method unique to them as it is local and cheap) while Australia fluoridates its waters, and UK has areas where people don't want fluoride in their water so the water provider can not put it in. Point is... a drug may work in one people/ geography and not in another. some blood pressure medication are also not advised in America as they cause adverse events in people of African origin. should we ban those too? aside from that, the religious validations or justifications are just pointless. I mean give me a better rationale than islam allows it or not. its nowhere in the book that says' do not vaccinate ur children'. and I am sure none of us is Gods personal spokesperson. if we want our kids to be vaccinated we should be able to... if we don't no one should force us. the state should not be forcing this on us... especially when the main reason of polio spread is the fecal contamination of food water and hands.... where is their musalmani of the taliban and of our government? are they providing us with good sanitation and clean water? after all thats wat i pay taxes for, right?
Realist
July 16, 2012 9:31 am
In a way it is a good thing. The children of these taliban will get polio and die, leaving fewer Taliban to worry about in the future. It will also save the children from getting brainwashed and committing horrible crimes. It is the natural order that weak of the herd die off while the strong survive. It will result in a stronger and brighter Pakistan.
yousaf
July 16, 2012 9:18 am
Since when is america so concerned about Pakistani lives? Don't you have your own problems? Many Americans can't pay their medical expenses but you are willing to spend millions on Pakistani kids, while in the same time you pay millions in promotional video's etc promoting birth control. Do you know that Pakistani fathers get arrested if they stop the docters from giving these vaccines to their own children! Why is it so important for you to let our children ingest a vaccine that is BANNED in your own country? Extremist are those that are forcing their ideology and will upon people world wide, Muslims didn't invade the US, no the US invades and bombs us....you force your way of life upon us. Not the other way around!
Yousaf
July 16, 2012 9:17 am
No its these vaccines that put children at risk! Its not without reason the the USA HAS BANNED THE ORAL VACCINE IN THEIR OWN COUNTRY. And the numbers speak for themselves: Last month, Anthony Gucciardi revealed in his article, published in Natural Society, that close to 80% of recent polio cases IN PAKISTAN are reported among children who had been vaccinated for polio. This is a shockingly high figure: of 136 polio cases, 107 were those vaccinated for the disease. 80% of polio cases because of the living virus vaccine that our children get forced to eat. Its not educated and enlighted, as you all seemingly want to be, to just blindly follow the west. Go en check yourself what your children get in to their bodies! These are our kids we have the right to know! See this link: http://greenheritagenews.com/whos-polio-vaccine-c...
zakaryazai
July 16, 2012 9:00 am
how will the history be judging us making alliance with those who are bent upon implementing their antihumanist agenda in the garb of islam. imran khan and hamid gul should be asked to use their good offices to persuade them that polio vaccination has no strategic consequences.
Hassan Ali Raza
July 16, 2012 8:24 am
Sometimes I feel these Taliban guys are an offshoot of the Church of Scientology wherein No drug use is promoted.!!
murali
July 16, 2012 8:23 am
Can anything be as pitiable as this?