Officials had pinned their last hopes of inoculating children in North Waziristan on talks with tribesmen, which were successively delayed until Wednesday, the last day of the nationwide campaign.
North Waziristan administrator Siraj Ahmed Khan told The Express Tribune that he had sought to convince the tribesmen to accept the vaccinations for the highly-infectious disease that affects mainly the under-fives and can cause paralysis in a matter of hours. Some cases can be fatal.
“Polio is rampant in tribal areas and the government desires to prevent its spread,” Khan told the meeting. Khan informed the jirga that the campaign was in the interest of the tribal people, adding that funds for development works in North Waziristan could also be affected if the campaign ban was not lifted.
But at the conclusion of negotiations, the jirga linked the immunisation campaign to an end to drone strikes in the tribal areas. “Polio vaccination will be banned until drone attacks are stopped,” tribal elder Qadir Khan told a gathering of more than 120 elders and religious scholars in Miramshah, the main town of North Waziristan.
Tribal elders told Khan that drone strikes were not only a concern for the Taliban, but also for the tribal people. “Drones martyr so many children, while polio afflicts one or two out of hundreds of thousands,” said tribal elder Maamoor Khan.
However, the jirga assured the administrator that vaccination would resume if the government halted strikes, while also agreeing to pass the message to Hafiz Gul Bahadar, who leads the powerful Taliban Shura. Religious scholar Maulana Gull Salim told The Express Tribune that a response from the Taliban could be expected today (Thursday), adding that the grand jirga of North Waziristan would try to resolve the issue through negotiations.
Polio boycott in Frontier Region
Hundreds of tribal people boycotted polio vaccinations in protest against load-shedding in the Drazinda village. Local elders of Sherani tribe held a jirga in Drazinda Bazaar and subsequently decided to kick out polio teams from DI Khan. Tribal elder Malik Yonus Khan told The Express Tribune that locals had no other reservations about the campaign.
The prime minister’s office said that the campaign would be extended until Thursday and Friday in the rest of Pakistan. The Lancet medical journal has said vaccination problems last year led to Pakistan’s highest number of polio cases in a decade, 198, compared to 144 in 2010.
Condemning the campaign as a cover for espionage, militants banned vaccinations in North and South Waziristan, risking the health of 240,000 children. Officials said that a further 110,000 children in Khyber Agency also risked going without the vaccine, because of fighting between government troops and warlord Mangal Bagh.
(Read: Polio and militancy)
Published in The Express Tribune, July 19th, 2012.
COMMENTS (18)
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@g What? Shakil Afridi is the hero of enlightened Pakistanis and true Muslims. He definitely did a great job!
@Hashmi
No it is not justified. I don't understand why Afridi is not considered a hero in Pakistan. Can anyone explain? He helped remove the most evil man on the planet.
Pakistan suffers a lot. Not because of the violence of bad people, but because of the silence of good people.
why all the negative comments... is this not justified after Shakil Afridi.. why should they trust these vaccines, they can have anything in them.. jirga shouldnt trust this government..
How you will convince a Father in Waziristan that GORA has sent polio vaccine drops to save your younger son while he has already lost his eledr son in DRONE STRIKE.
"No vaccines until drones are stopped..." The Americans are being punished again !!
@Mirza hahahaha very rightly said.
Okay so how are the two connected.
have they gone nuts??
This Jirga speaks for others why ???
the rest have to suffer as their children are suffering from Polio
The drones should Target these JIRGA Members now
@Imran Haider You have raised n pointed to the core issues, hope some one from government n some how will enlighten the nation. However, logic of relating drones to polio vaccination is mind blowing.
Unbelievable. Are we living in 2012?
Where were the drones when the Jirga was taking place?
Very sad decision I am sure the children of wazirstan deserved all the modern health benefits, now those who will be infected by this virus and clirppled could have been avoided. Don't deny God blessing please. Love you all.
If the Constitution of Pakistan recognizes the tribal jirga system, then there is nothing wrong about the jirga’s endorsement of the Taliban ban on polio vaccination. In that case, the children’s suffering would be perfectly constitutional. If you do not like it, change the constitution! However, if the Constitution of Pakistan does not recognize the tribal jirga system, then the government should brutally establish its writ and polio vaccination should be administered to the innocent children. If the government is unable to establish its writ in favor of polio vaccination, then it means that Pakistan’s claim of sovereignty over North Waziristan is not valid. How could a state claim sovereignty over a land where its writ does not apply? So until the polio vaccinations restart, Pakistan and we the Pakistanis do not have any legal right and moral basis to complain about the drone attacks on North Waziristan because it is not a part of our state.
one word JAAHIL.....
I am utterly speechless. I have no speech!
This is why we will remain a third world country.