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Pakistan launches final anti-polio campaign of 2024 amid surge in cases

Pakistan launched its final nationwide polio vaccination campaign for 2024 on Monday, aiming to protect 45 million children after a surge in cases. Despite security risks and attacks on health workers, the campaign will run until December 22.

Published December 16,2024
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Pakistan began on Monday its last nationwide vaccination campaign for the year to protect 45 million children from polio after a surge in new cases hampered efforts to stop the disease, officials said.

According to the World Health Organization, Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan remain the only two countries where the hasn't been stopped,

Pakistan has reported 63 confirmed cases since January.

Ayesha Raza Farooq, the prime minister's adviser for the polio eradication program, said the anti-polio drive will continue until December 22.

"As a mother, I am appealing to you to open your doors for health workers," she said.

Pakistan regularly launches such campaigns despite medical personnel who oversee the vaccinations and security forces escorting them. Militants falsely claim that vaccination campaigns are a Western conspiracy to sterilize children.

Authorities deployed thousands of police officers to protect the health workers following intelligence reports that insurgents could target them. However, gunmen opened fire Monday on police escorting polio workers in Karak, a city in the restive Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, killing a police officer and wounding a health worker, local police official Ayaz Khan said.

More than 200 polio workers and police assigned for their protection have been killed since the 1990s, according to health officials and authorities.

The latest anti-polio drive campaign began a day after Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif met with medical staff and vowed that Pakistan would win the war against polio.

Afghanistan reported at least 23 confirmed cases in 2024, according to data from the World Health Organization.

In September, the Afghan Taliban in Afghanistan, a devastating setback for polio eradication as the virus is one of the world's most infectious and any unvaccinated groups of children where the virus is spreading could undo years of progress.