ISLAMABAD: Caretaker Health Minister Dr. Nadeem Jan this week warned stern action would be taken against culprits who gunned down a senior anti-polio program official in northwestern Pakistan, a statement from Pakistan’s health ministry said.
Unidentified gunmen opened fire on Dr. Abdul Rehman’s vehicle, who was a focal person for the polio eradication program in Pakistan’s northwestern Bajaur tribal district on Friday. The attack took place in the district’s Loi Mamund town Rehman was leaving for duty at a local hospital, according to Zareef Khan, a senior police officer in Bajaur.
The attack also left a police official, Ilyas Khan, wounded. The anti-polio program official succumbed to his injuries after being admitted to a Peshawar hospital for treatment.
In a message on social media platform X on Friday, Pakistan’s Ministry of National Health Services said Dr. Jan strongly condemned the attack, which left him “very sad.”
“Dr. Nadeem Jan will, at all any cost, bring Rehman’s killers to justice and make an example out of them,” the post read.
The restive Bajaur district was once a stronghold of the Pakistani Taliban, which are separate from but close allies of the Afghan Taliban, before the Pakistani army drove the militants out in successive operations that began in the late 2000s.
In the past, militants, including the Pakistani Taliban, have killed scores of anti-polio vaccinators and their security escorts in the region.
Earlier this month, five policemen were killed and 22 others were wounded after a blast targeted an anti-polio protection team in Mamund village of the same district, according to police. The police contingent was headed out to far-flung areas in the province to protect the vaccinators.
Opposition to inoculation grew in Pakistan’s northwestern tribal regions after the US Central Intelligence Agency organized a fake vaccination drive to help track down Al-Qaeda’s former leader Osama bin Laden in the Pakistani garrison town of Abbottabad in 2011.
The latest attack comes amid an ongoing nationwide campaign to vaccinate 4.2 million children under the age of five years. Pakistan and Afghanistan are the only two countries in the world where the disease is still endemic.