Taliban explosion near polio vaccination team kills two in Pakistan

Attackers believed to have targeted police assigned to protect the health workers

A man who was injured in a bomb explosion is brought to a hospital in Peshawar, Pakistan yesterday. Photograph: Mohammad Sajjad/AP
A man who was injured in a bomb explosion is brought to a hospital in Peshawar, Pakistan yesterday. Photograph: Mohammad Sajjad/AP

A Taliban bomb that exploded yesterday near a polio vaccination team in Pakistan’s volatile northwestern city of Peshawar killed two people, police said, in the latest in a string of attacks on health workers.

Islamist violence has been on the rise in Pakistan, undermining prime minister Nawaz Sharif’s efforts to tame the insurgency by opening peace talks with the Taliban.

Peshawar has borne the brunt of much of that violence, with the frontier city near the Afghan border hit by at least four attacks that killed scores in the past month.

Yesterday’s blast appeared to target police assigned to protect the vaccination team. Health workers have been attacked repeatedly since the Taliban denounced vaccination as a Western plot to sterilise Muslims.

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Two people were killed and about 20 people wounded, said Peshawar police official Najeeb ur-Rehman.

The bomb was placed directly outside a clinic in Sulemankhen, on the outskirts of the provincial capital of Peshawar, Mr Rehman said.

A spokesman for Jundullah, a faction of the Pakistani Taliban, claimed responsibility.

“Jews and the United States want to stamp out Islamic beliefs through these drops,” said the spokesman, Ahmed Marwat.

Gunmen killed two female polio health workers in the same area earlier this year. Similar attacks have been staged elsewhere in Pakistan and also in Nigeria, where Islamist gunmen killed nine health workers in February.

Such attacks hamper efforts by global health bodies to wipe out polio, a virus that can cause irreversible paralysis hours after infection. Polio remains endemic in only three countries: Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria.

A small but vocal minority of religious leaders in those countries accuses the West of using the vaccination campaign to cover up a variety of anti-Islam plots.– (Reuters)