Taliban health ministry launches annual polio vaccination drive
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[March 14, 2023]
KABUL (Reuters) - Afghanistan has launched its annual polio
inoculation campaign aimed at reaching 9 million children, the health
ministry said on Monday, the second year in a row the vaccination drive
has taken place under Taliban rule.
Afghanistan and neighbouring Pakistan are the last countries with
endemic polio, an incurable and highly infectious disease that can cause
crippling paralysis in young children.
Polio has been virtually eliminated globally through a decades-long
inoculation drive. But insecurity, inaccessible terrain, mass
displacement and suspicion of outside interference have hampered mass
vaccination in Afghanistan and some areas of Pakistan.
Nek Wali Shah Momin, director of Afghanistan's National Emergency
Operation Center (EOC) for Polio Eradication, said many more areas could
now be reached since the Taliban took over and fighting stopped. The EOC
is led by the health ministry and includes international agencies
including the World Health Orgnization and the U.N. children's agency.
While the Taliban have in recent months banned many female NGO workers
and stopped women attending universities and most high schools, the
doctor said female vaccinators were working on the campaign.
He said women were crucial to accessing children who were often at home
with their female caregivers who were usually not comfortable
interacting with male vaccinators.
In areas where vaccination teams had to travel longer distances, Momin
said authorities had required female staff to have a male chaperone. He
said they had recruited and trained male family members of the female
vaccinators to join the teams' vaccination efforts.
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A general view of the houses on the TV
mountain in Kabul, Afghanistan, January 25, 2023. REUTERS/Ali Khara
Some militant factions have targeted
vaccination efforts in the past. In 2022, eight workers were killed
in attacks in northern Afghanistan.
"The support of all Afghans, including parents, community leaders,
ethnic elders, and religious leaders, is critical to eradicate polio
and we want them to take part in the fight,” the Taliban's acting
health minister Qalandar Ebad said.
Some health experts said the role of the Taliban, whose stated goal
is to impose their strict interpretation of Islamic law, could help
encourage acceptance of vaccination in conservative areas around the
region.
"Religious leaders' role in the polio elimination drive in both
Pakistan and Afghanistan is crucial ... the active participation of
the Taliban in polio campaigns is a very positive and major
development," said Rana Jawad Asghar, an epidemiology expert and CEO
of Pakistan-based consultancy Global Health Strategists and
Implementers.
(Reporting by Charlotte Greenfield and Mohammad Yunus Yawar; Editing
by Alison Williams)
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