One member of the vaccination transit team was killed in Taloqan district in Takhar province, while four members of house-to-house teams were murdered in two separate incidents in Kunduz city, according to a statement from the UN Country Team.We condemn today's attack and assaination of 8 polio vaccination workers in #Afghanistan in strongest terms. This is violation of International Humanitarian Law. @DrTedros @UNReliefChief @DeborahLyonsUN @unicefchief @WHOAfghanistan @UNAMAnews @unafghanistan https://t.co/Qs4B3tQak8
— Dr. Ramiz Alakbarov (@RamizAlakbarov) February 24, 2022
Two vaccinators and a social mobilizer were killed in Emamsaheb district of Kunduz province.
In the wake of the carnage, the UN immediately suspended the national polio vaccination campaign in Kunduz and Takhar provinces.
Violation of humanitarian law
Ramiz Alakbarov, the Secretary-General’s Deputy Special Representative for Afghanistan, took to Twitter to express condemnation in the strongest terms. He said the attacks and assassinations were a violation of international humanitarian law.
The head of the World Health Organization (WHO), Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyeus, has also expressed his profound shock. Four of the health workers were women, he said in a post on Twitter.
“We extend our deepest condolences to their families and colleagues,” he wrote, adding that health workers should not be targeted.
Health under fire
The UN Country Team was appalled by the brutality of the killings, noting that this was not the first time health workers have come under attack.
Last year, nine polio workers were killed during national polio vaccination campaigns.
These immunization exercises are a vital and effective way to reach millions of children to protect them against polio, the UN statement said, and depriving them from an assurance of a healthy life is inhumane.
“This senseless violence must stop immediately, and those responsible must be investigated and brought to justice. These attacks are a violation of international humanitarian law.”
Afghanistan, the country I love, is still my motherland. As a former retired UNICEF staff I condemn the barbaric acts of abusing, hurting and killing of any single Afghan especially the health workers or the educators. Such barbaric acts are against any and every human rights laws and human decency. No authority has the right to take a life, they can not create.
ReplyDeleteMy condolences and sympathy to the families of those brutally killed. My they Rest In Peace!