Gunmen kill four polio workers, injures three in Afghanistan’s east

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Four polio vaccination workers have been killed and three others injured in separate attacks in Afghanistan’s eastern city of Jalalabad, a provincial health department official said

A wave of assassinations has hit urban centres since peace talks began between the Taliban and the Afghan government last year in Doha, many of them targeting government employees, health workers, media and civil society members.

The head of polio immunisation drive in Nangarhar, Dr Jan Mohammad, of which Jalalabad is the main city, on Tuesday said gunmen targeted polio workers in three locations in the city that killed four and wounded three others.

“Today was the second day of our operations after three months but we have to suspend it once again,” Mohammad said, adding that all those killed were men.

Gunmen killed three female polio vaccination workers in Jalalabad in March this year, which forced the health workers to suspend their operations and assess security.

Afghanistan and Pakistan are the only countries in the world where polio remains endemic.

No group claimed responsibility for Tuesday’s attacks.
The Taliban, which is fighting to overthrow the foreign-backed Afghan government, has denied involvement in previous attacks.

The ISIL (ISIS) group has also taken responsibility for several targeted killings that have taken aim at the country’s nascent civil society, as well as journalists and legal professionals.

The governor of Nangarhar, Zia ul Haq Amarkhil, said police were investigating the attacks.

Oppose vaccination

Many in Afghanistan’s conservative society oppose vaccinations, with fighters frequently attacking health workers claiming they are being used by the West as a cover for spying.

The recent increase in violence comes as the US and NATO are completing their military withdrawal from Afghanistan.

The estimated 2,500-3,500 US soldiers and 7,000 NATO-allied troops are to be gone by September 11 at the latest, though there are projections they may be gone by mid-July. Reports said.

Olawunmi Sadiq/Aljazeera

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