PESHAWAR: Seventy health workers in Pakistan’s Khyber tribal region have refused to join a polio vaccination campaign because of security concerns, a media report said.
Haji Sadeeq, a spokesman for the health workers, said the circumstances, especially in Jamrud area of Khyber Agency, were not favorable for his colleagues to take part in the three-day campaign.
“We feel threatened and everyone is frightened after the killing of our colleagues last month,” he was quoted as saying by the Dawn daily.
He said it was not possible for health workers to conduct the door-to-door campaign because of the presence of militants in Jamrud.
Sadeeq said they were ready to sacrifice their jobs if they were forced to administer the vaccinations.
Anti-polio campaigns in the tribal belt have been hit since the Taliban banned vaccinations in June 2012, saying the restriction would last till the US stops drone strikes.
Militants and gunmen frequently attack vaccination teams, accusing them of being Western spies and part of a plot to “sterilize” Muslims. Dozens have died in these attacks.
A member of the local paramedics association said none of the “front-line workers” had been consulted when their office-bearers announced the end of an earlier boycott.
He said Khasadar and Levies personnel were being targeted and their presence during the campaign would make health workers more vulnerable to militant attacks. -PTI