Vulnerable Vaccinators

1 min read

THE campaign to eradicate polio from Pakistan cannot succeed unless the safety of vaccinators and security personnel on the front lines of this battle is guaranteed. According to one count, over 200 polio workers and police personnel have been martyred in the field since the 1990s. The latest tragedy occurred only a few days ago when a policeman guarding a polio team in KP’s Karak area was martyred.

However, while militant violence forms a major part of the threat confronting polio teams, these vulnerable men and women face other forms of violence and harassment as well. For example, three members of a polio team were attacked in Karachi’s Korangi area on Friday when they approached a home to vaccinate children. A number of women, as well as men, savagely attacked the team with hammers and shovels, while police personnel accompanying the vaccinators were pelted with stones. Meanwhile, two men are being investigated for an earlier incident in which they locked up a female polio worker inside a Nazimabad flat when she arrived to administer vaccines.

For those who attack and harass polio teams, the law must be firm. No violence can be tolerated against these brave individuals who risk their lives in their efforts to eradicate the disease. When people see there is punishment for such violent behaviour, they may think twice before harming vaccinators and police. Along with legal action, the state needs to continue public awareness and community engagement campaigns to ensure refusals reduce. Particularly in urban and rural pockets where vaccine refusals are high, community elders and religious leaders need to amplify the message that all minors must be vaccinated. Pakistan cannot afford to be lax in its approach towards the security of vaccinators and the health of future generations. Therefore, those who harm vaccinators must be punished, while anti-vaccine propaganda needs to be countered with the facts.

(Editorial) Published in Dawn, December 22nd, 2024

Previous Story

Reforming Seminaries

Next Story

Beyond Schools

Latest from Blog

Hindu Family Demands Safe Return of Abducted Girl

UMERKOT: A grieving Hindu family in Umerkot has desperately demanded safe return of their teenage daughter who was allegedly abducted under deceptive circumstances. On Feb 16, the girl, an eleventh grade student, went to a local fair at the Shiv temple and did not return home. Her mother and a…

92pc of Education Budget Spent on Salaries, PA Told

KARACHI: Education Minister Syed Sardar Shah on Feb 20 said that 92percent of the school education budget was spent on salaries and pensions, lamenting that the education sector had become a source of employment rather than a focus on learning. Furnishing a statement and replies to lawmakers’ written and verbal…

Distribution of Free Textbooks among 5.2m Govt School Students Begins

KARACHI: Announcing that the Sindh Textbook Board (STBB) has achieved its publication target by preparing 52 million textbook sets for the academic year 2026-27, Education Minister Syed Sardar Shah has said every student will have new textbooks on the first day of the new academic year i.e. April 1. He…

Court Nullifies Marriage of Underage Hindu Girl

THATTA: The Model Criminal Trial Court of Thatta has declared void the marriage of a 16-year-old Hindu girl, ruling that a minor’s purported consent cannot override statutory prohibitions under the Sindh Child Marriage Restraint Act, 2013. The court ordered that the girl be shifted to a government-run shelter home for…

1,695 Suspected Measles Cases Reported

LAHORE: A total of 1,695 suspected measles cases have been reported in Punjab during the first four weeks of 2026, with 330 cases confirmed through laboratory testing, according to a report submitted by the Director General Health Services to the Lahore High Court (LHC). The report was filed in response…
Go toTop