Berliner Boersenzeitung - Fighting Taliban and mistrust, Pakistan marks one year polio-free

EUR -
AED 4.293297
AFN 80.91457
ALL 97.787182
AMD 448.803483
ANG 2.093049
AOA 1072.008381
ARS 1473.86814
AUD 1.776114
AWG 2.107191
AZN 1.992006
BAM 1.954944
BBD 2.359867
BDT 142.117771
BGN 1.954944
BHD 0.440707
BIF 3482.375178
BMD 1.169038
BND 1.495545
BOB 8.093456
BRL 6.502078
BSD 1.168788
BTN 100.194128
BWP 15.604167
BYN 3.824825
BYR 22913.14706
BZD 2.347672
CAD 1.60129
CDF 3373.844424
CHF 0.930865
CLF 0.029161
CLP 1110.323824
CNY 8.380309
CNH 8.386416
COP 4691.84559
CRC 589.441902
CUC 1.169038
CUP 30.97951
CVE 110.21674
CZK 24.665189
DJF 208.128867
DKK 7.461795
DOP 70.379183
DZD 151.705573
EGP 57.855667
ERN 17.535572
ETB 161.021794
FJD 2.621276
FKP 0.865796
GBP 0.866082
GEL 3.16855
GGP 0.865796
GHS 12.162504
GIP 0.865796
GMD 83.586233
GNF 10119.194341
GTQ 8.978183
GYD 244.526047
HKD 9.177043
HNL 30.804608
HRK 7.533988
HTG 153.404781
HUF 399.682894
IDR 18972.787189
ILS 3.894359
IMP 0.865796
INR 100.340712
IQD 1531.439931
IRR 49245.731019
ISK 142.400984
JEP 0.865796
JMD 186.900509
JOD 0.828894
JPY 172.305743
KES 151.39488
KGS 102.232832
KHR 4700.702671
KMF 492.340258
KPW 1052.116012
KRW 1612.291055
KWD 0.357497
KYD 0.973978
KZT 606.853248
LAK 25169.39103
LBP 104745.815539
LKR 351.480519
LRD 234.977068
LSL 20.727492
LTL 3.451866
LVL 0.70714
LYD 6.307006
MAD 10.52427
MDL 19.730711
MGA 5178.839256
MKD 61.567289
MMK 2454.245682
MNT 4196.950222
MOP 9.450302
MRU 46.415189
MUR 53.144915
MVR 18.007558
MWK 2026.613733
MXN 21.79128
MYR 4.971339
MZN 74.771677
NAD 20.727487
NGN 1786.89858
NIO 42.962591
NOK 11.849024
NPR 160.312901
NZD 1.945964
OMR 0.449487
PAB 1.169038
PEN 4.145998
PGK 4.822327
PHP 66.037206
PKR 332.445259
PLN 4.265879
PYG 9058.18206
QAR 4.256005
RON 5.081579
RSD 117.101424
RUB 91.251047
RWF 1676.400657
SAR 4.38448
SBD 9.746182
SCR 17.064906
SDG 702.011685
SEK 11.179213
SGD 1.497192
SHP 0.91868
SLE 26.307644
SLL 24514.149043
SOS 668.109564
SRD 43.49699
STD 24196.728708
SVC 10.226653
SYP 15199.796755
SZL 20.727478
THB 37.929391
TJS 11.296148
TMT 4.103324
TND 3.393762
TOP 2.814764
TRY 46.965814
TTD 7.940625
TWD 34.184894
TZS 3030.735558
UAH 48.831642
UGX 4189.226528
USD 1.169038
UYU 47.51952
UZS 14794.17774
VES 133.584256
VND 30528.845862
VUV 139.77719
WST 3.204584
XAF 656.030538
XAG 0.030452
XAU 0.000348
XCD 3.159384
XDR 0.812964
XOF 656.030538
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.73182
ZAR 20.980552
ZMK 10522.750076
ZMW 27.402347
ZWL 376.429796
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Fighting Taliban and mistrust, Pakistan marks one year polio-free
Fighting Taliban and mistrust, Pakistan marks one year polio-free

Fighting Taliban and mistrust, Pakistan marks one year polio-free

Bathed in crisp morning light, Sidra Hussain grips a cooler stacked with glistening vials of polio vaccine in northwest Pakistan.

Text size:

Watching over Hussain and her partner, a policeman unslings his rifle and eyes the horizon.

In concert they begin their task -- going door-to-door on the outskirts of Mardan city, dripping bitter doses of rose-coloured medicine into infants' mouths on the eve of a major milestone for the nation's anti-polio drive.

The last infection of the wild poliovirus was recorded on January 27, 2021, according to officials, and Friday marks the first time in Pakistan's history that a year has passed with no new cases.

To formally eradicate the disease, a nation must be polio-free for three consecutive years -- but even 12 months is a long time in a country where vaccination teams are in the crosshairs of a simmering insurgency.

Since the Taliban takeover of neighbouring Afghanistan, the Pakistan version of the movement has become emboldened and its fighters frequently target polio teams.

"Life or death is in God's hands," Hussain told AFP this week, amid a patchwork of high-walled compounds in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

"We have to come," she said defiantly. "We can't just turn back because it's difficult."

- Thriving in uncertainty -

Nigeria officially eradicated wild polio in 2020, leaving Pakistan and Afghanistan as the only countries where the disease -- which causes crippling paralysis -- is still endemic.

Spread through faeces and saliva, the virus has historically thrived in the blurred borderlands between the South Asian nations, where state infrastructure is weak and the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) have carved out a home.

A separate group sharing common heritage with the Afghan Taliban, the TTP was founded in 2007 and once held sway over large swathes of the restive tribal tracts of Pakistan.

In 2014 it was largely ousted by an army offensive, its fighters retreating across the porous border with Afghanistan.

But last year overall militant attacks surged by 56 per cent according to the Pakistan Institute for Conflict and Security Studies, reversing a six-year downward trend.

The largest number of assaults came in August, coinciding with the Taliban takeover of Kabul.

Pakistan's newspapers are regularly peppered with stories of police slain as they guard polio teams -- and just this week a constable was gunned down in Kohat -- 80 kilometres (50 miles) southwest of Mardan.

Pakistani media has reported as many as 70 polio workers killed in militant attacks since 2012 -- mostly in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

Still, a TTP spokesman told AFP it "never attacked any polio workers", and that security forces were their target.

"They will be targeted wherever they perform their duties," he said

Mardan deputy commissioner Habib Ullah Arif admits polio teams are "a very soft target", but says the fight to eradicate the disease is entwined with the security threat.

"There is only one concept: we are going to defeat polio, we are going to defeat militancy," he pledged.

- Vaccine scepticism -

Pakistan anti-polio drives have been running since 1994, with up to 260,000 vaccinators staging regular waves of regional inoculation campaigns.

But on the fringes of the country, the teams often face scepticism.

"In certain areas of Pakistan, it was considered as a Western conspiracy," explained Shahzad Baig -- head of the national polio eradication programme.

The theories ranged wildly: polio teams are spies, the vaccines cause infertility, or contain pig fat forbidden by Islam.

The spy theory gained currency with the killing of Osama bin Laden in 2011, whose hideaway in Abbottabad was revealed to the United States -- unwittingly or otherwise -- by a vaccine programme run by a Pakistani doctor.

"It's a complex situation," said Baig. "It's socio-economical, it's political."

The porous border with Afghanistan -- a strategic crutch for the TTP -- can also keep polio circulating.

"For the virus, Pakistan and Afghanistan were one country," said Baig.

In Mardan, 10 teams -- each comprising two women and an armed police guard -- fan out across the city's suburbs as morning turns to afternoon.

The teams chalk dates on the homes they visit and smear children's fingers with indelible ink to mark those already inoculated.

On Monday they delivered dozens more doses to add to the nationwide tally.

"We have the fear in mind, but we have to be active to serve our nation," said polio worker Zeb-un-Nissa.

"We have to eradicate this disease."

(Y.Berger--BBZ)