Gunmen Kill Seven Police Guarding Polio Team in Pakistan: Officials


Gunmen Kill Seven Police Guarding Polio Team in Pakistan: Officials

TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Gunmen on motorcycles Wednesday shot dead seven policemen guarding a polio vaccination team in Pakistan's southern port city Karachi, officials said, a brazen attack in the country's economic hub.

Feroz Shah, a senior police official told AFP that eight gunmen carried out the killings in two separate attacks in the city's western Orangi Town neighborhood.

"The gunmen first opened fire on three policemen in the streets of Orangi Town, killing them all," he said, adding: "Later they shot dead four policemen, who were sitting in a police mobile van" a few streets away.

Abdul Kareem, an official in Abbasi Shaheed Hospital where the bodies were taken, also confirmed the casualties.

The polio workers, who were unharmed in the attack, were on the third day of an immunization drive.

"The policemen sacrificed their lives to protect the polio workers," provincial home minister Sohail Anwar Siyal, told the private Dunya TV channel.

No group immediately came forward to claim responsibility, but extremist outfits including the Pakistani Taliban say the polio vaccination drive is a front for espionage or a conspiracy to sterilize people.

Pakistan is one of only two countries where polio, a crippling childhood disease, remains endemic.

Attempts to eradicate the disease have been badly hit by militant attacks on immunization teams that have claimed more then 100 lives since December 2012.

In 2014 the number of polio cases recorded in Pakistan soared to 306, the highest in 14 years, before falling to 54 in 2015.

The most recent attack came in January, when a suicide bomber blew himself up outside a polio vaccination center in the southwestern city of Quetta, killing 15 people -- two civilians and 13 security officials.

Authorities want to vaccinate 35 million children under the age of five, eradicating the disease by the end of 2016.

In Karachi, a heaving metropolis of around 20 million, authorities have enlisted 2,500 female "neighborhood vaccinators" drawn from local communities to support the program.

Opposition to all forms of inoculation mounted after the CIA organized a fake vaccination drive to help track down Al-Qaeda's former leader Osama Bin Laden in the Pakistani garrison town of Abbottabad.

The terror chief was killed during a US special forces raid in 2011.

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