- Policeman was protecting team of female polio workers in Pakistan
- Another police officer was wounded in the attack
- Group were working in Mardan as part of UN-backed vaccination programme
- Islamic militants suspected to be behind the attack
- Opponents of scheme claim it is intended to make Muslim children sterile
- Attack comes after nine polio workers shot in Pakistan in December
Mail Online
A policeman has been shot dead while protecting a team of female polio workers in Pakistan, in the latest in a series of attacks on people connected to a UN-backed vaccination programme.
Recent months have seen a spate of deadly attacks on aid workers linked to the scheme – which has been condemned by some Islamic groups who claim it is intended to sterilise Muslim children – in Pakistan and in northern Nigeria.
No group has claimed responsibility for the latest attack in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province today, but suspicion has fallen on Islamic militants.
Polio: The UN-backed vaccination programme has been condemned by some Islamic militants who claim it is intended to make Muslim children sterile (file photo)
In January seven female aid workers and a male doctor were shot dead while working for an agency vaccinating children against polio in Pakistan. The Taliban – whose leaders had repeatedly denounced the vaccination programme – denied involvement in the attacks.
The next month nine female health workers were shot in northern Nigeria in two attacks around 30 minutes apart.
The shootings in Nigeria were blamed on Islamist militant group Boko Haram.
Pakistan is one of only three countries in the world where polio is still endemic. Health workers have made progress in combatting the disease in recent years, but the attacks threaten to reverse that progress.
Some opponents to the vaccination campaign have accused health workers of acting as spies for the U.S. and claimed the vaccine is intended to make Muslim children sterile.

The Drone operators murder the suspects via a screen in a live reality video show from thousands of miles away, and are now suffering terrible traumatic stress, as the Drone operators often watch a house and its family and children coming and going for sometimes weeks before the order is given to blow the house up, with all its inhabitants and suspects at home, children and all. This has proved to be more traumatizing to the Drone operators than it would be for a fighter jet pilot who does the same, though from a cowardly 2,000 feet and who cannot see the beautiful little children who live inside the property he bombs.
Speaking in the House of Lords, John Gilbert said Britain could use the radiation warheads “to create cordons sanitaire along various borders where people are causing trouble”.
“Your Lordships may say that this is impractical, but nobody lives up in the mountains on the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan except for a few goats and a handful of people herding them,” he said last week.
“If you told them that some ERRB (Enhanced Radiation Reduced Blast) warheads were going to be dropped there and that it would be a very unpleasant place to go, they would not go there.
“You would greatly reduce your problem of protecting those borders from infiltration from one side or another.
“These things are not talked about, but they should be, because there are great possibilities for deterrence in using the weapons that we already have in that respect.”
Neutron bombs are a type of thermonuclear weapon designed to kill people while leaving physical structures such as buildings in tact.
Responding for the government Jim Wallace said the coalition did not share the “rumbustious views” of Gilbert.








