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A polio worker was allegedly abducted and raped in Jacobabad on Wednesday, the Deputy Commissioner (DC) of the district said.
DC Jacobabad Zahoor Murri said that the incident took place in Detha village, within the limits of Moladad police station.
“The police arrived at the scene of the incident and shifted the victim to James Hospital under tight security,” he said.
The polio worker was undergoing a medical examination at the hospital.
“The medicolegal examination would confirm if any abuse took place,” said DC Murri.
He added the polio worker alleged that the two armed suspects called her on the pretext of administering polio drops to children.
“Both suspects have been identified and operations are underway to arrest them,” the deputy commissioner said, adding that the arrests will be made soon.
Meanwhile, gunmen in Bajaur killed a polio worker and a policeman on Wednesday during the latest campaign to vaccinate millions of children in the country, police said.
Security officials attend the funeral prayers for a policeman who was killed along with a polio worker in an attack by gunmen in Bajaur district on September 11. — AFP
“After completing their duties, a polio team was returning to the local (health unit) when two unidentified motorcyclists opened fire on them,” Waqas Rafiq, a senior police official, told AFP. He said a polio worker and a police officer were killed and a third person was wounded.
The attack happened in Bajaur district, close to the border with Afghanistan, just two days after the Islamic State group claimed an improvised bomb attack on a polio vaccination team in the same district that wounded nine people.
Wednesday’s attack happened on the third day of a campaign to vaccinate 30 million children in a week-long campaign, which will now be paused in part of Bajaur district.
Pakistan and Afghanistan are the only countries in the world where polio remains endemic despite an effective vaccine. Militants have killed hundreds of officers and polio workers over more than a decade.
According to the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef), the number of polio cases in Pakistan has fallen dramatically from around 20,000 annually in the early 1990s to just eight cases in 2018.
However, there has been a surge in cases again with 17 reported since January compared to only six last year, according to Pakistan’s Polio Eradication Programme.
Police officers are routinely deployed to protect polio workers going door-to-door in restive regions and frequently come under attack by militants waging a war against security forces.
Pockets of Pakistan’s mountainous border regions remain resistant to inoculation as a result of misinformation, conspiracy theories, and some firebrand clerics declaring it un-Islamic.