Polio: The final battle

The girl is no more than five. She cowers in her room, crying incessantly.

“I don’t want to die,” she sobs.

Her parents have finally been persuaded the vaccine is safe. She is brought out to watch her siblings stick out their tongues for drops.

But she continues to wail. The fear in the house is palpable. The polio workers were earlier barred by her relatives who were bearing rifles. The team called in help from Dr Uzma Hayat Khan, a public health adviser.

Khan, who monitors Pakistan’s vaccination campaigns, is experienced in dealing with refusals. But she was nervous as she approached the house.

She had been greeted by a group of men with no intention of letting her inside. The stand-off only ended when another relative appeared - a doctor. The polio team then managed to vaccinate all the children except the sobbing girl. They decided to try again the next day.

Many people in Pakistan are suspicious of the polio vaccine, despite the fact it saves lives. But tensions were running even higher than usual.

The day before their visit, a mass vaccination at a village school in the suburbs of Peshawar had ended in violence and arson.

The headmaster of the school, in Mashokhel village, had previously refused to allow the polio vaccine. This time he had bowed to government pressure and the inoculations had gone ahead. But shortly afterwards he rang parents to tell them their children were fainting and vomiting.  

Dozens of students from the school were taken to hospital. All were found to have no symptoms and were discharged. But it was too late to contain the panic, which had spread quickly via social media.

Furious parents gathered outside a local government health facility, broke down its boundary wall with hammers and sticks, kicked down the front gate, and barged inside to burn it down. All of this was shown live on local TV, which sparked even greater alarm in Peshawar.

In all, about 30,000 children from various schools in the city were taken to hospital, according to the government. In a press conference, the provincial health minister said the panic had been further fuelled by local mosques urging parents via loudspeaker to rush their vaccinated children to hospital. All the children had been found to be well, the minister said.

But the incident threatened to derail an already fragile vaccination programme. That month’s vaccination round, held for three days in April, culminated in three deaths - one of a polio worker, two of policemen accompanying them.

“People were harassing us on the streets, village shopkeepers told us to go away - one of them even said, ‘You are here to poison our children!’” says one woman in Khan’s team.

The government was forced to suspend the national campaign for several weeks until the atmosphere was less febrile.

But health workers are clear that the vaccinations are important.

They are the only defence against a dangerous childhood disease which invades the nervous system and causes paralysis in one in 200 cases. Polio can be fatal within a few hours if it paralyses the lungs. There is no cure.

Vaccinations have been largely successful in eradicating it from the world, and only three countries are still home to endemic polio - Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria. Nigeria, which has not had any cases since August 2016, is expected to be declared polio-free in the next few months.

Many people in Pakistan are suspicious of the polio vaccine, despite the fact it saves lives. But tensions were running even higher than usual.

The day before their visit, a mass vaccination at a village school in the suburbs of Peshawar had ended in violence and arson.

The headmaster of the school, in Mashokhel village, had previously refused to allow the polio vaccine. This time he had bowed to government pressure and the inoculations had gone ahead. But shortly afterwards he rang parents to tell them their children were fainting and vomiting.  

Dozens of students from the school were taken to hospital. All were found to have no symptoms and were discharged. But it was too late to contain the panic, which had spread quickly via social media.

Furious parents gathered outside a local government health facility, broke down its boundary wall with hammers and sticks, kicked down the front gate, and barged inside to burn it down. All of this was shown live on local TV, which sparked even greater alarm in Peshawar.

In all, about 30,000 children from various schools in the city were taken to hospital, according to the government. In a press conference, the provincial health minister said the panic had been further fuelled by local mosques urging parents via loudspeaker to rush their vaccinated children to hospital. All the children had been found to be well, the minister said.

But the incident threatened to derail an already fragile vaccination programme. That month’s vaccination round, held for three days in April, culminated in three deaths - one of a polio worker, two of policemen accompanying them.

“People were harassing us on the streets, village shopkeepers told us to go away - one of them even said, ‘You are here to poison our children!’” says one woman in Khan’s team.

The government has since suspended the national campaign until the atmosphere is less febrile.

But health workers are clear that the vaccinations are important.

They are the only defence against a dangerous childhood disease which invades the nervous system and causes paralysis in one in 200 cases. Polio can be fatal within a few hours if it paralyses the lungs. There is no cure.

Vaccinations have been largely successful in eradicating it from the world, and only three countries are still home to endemic polio - Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria. Nigeria, which has not had any cases since August 2016, is expected to be declared polio-free in the next few months.

Pakistan had been largely on track to be declared polio-free before too long. It has reduced annual cases from 22,000 in 1994 to fewer than 100 from 2015 onwards.

But this year has been considered a relative disappointment. The Pakistani government reports 21 cases of endemic polio - known as Wild Polio Virus or WPV1 - as of early June, compared with eight in 2017.

The WHO (World Health Organization) has issued a statement saying it is “gravely concerned” that the country’s battle with polio is going in the wrong direction.

And more refusals potentially heighten the risk to polio teams.

“Whenever I knock on a door, I am never sure what reaction I will get,” says Khan.

Gunfire

On the morning of 18 December 2012, polio worker Gulnaz was at home with her mother when they heard gunshots. Her mum was alarmed, but Gulnaz reassured her. She said it was probably wedding celebrations.

Then she got a call summoning her to the neighbourhood where her niece Madeeha and sister-in-law Fehmida were carrying out vaccinations.

Still Gulnaz assumed it was a routine stand-off. She planned to handle the refusers with a polite intervention.

Instead, she was confronted by a huge crowd of bystanders, ambulances and police. A body was laid out on a stretcher.

“The body was covered with a white sheet. But I could see Madeeha’s wrist hanging out of it.”

Gulnaz turned back in horror, only to see her sister-in-law lying in a pool of blood across the road. She too had been shot dead.

“I collapsed. My world was destroyed,” Gulnaz says.

Gulnaz is one of the 262,000 vaccinators on the front line of the battle against polio. She joined a vaccination team along with Madeeha and Fehmida in Karachi in 2011. They went door-to-door during regular vaccination rounds offering polio drops to all children under five.

Almost 70% of Pakistan’s polio workers are female - women are more likely to be granted access to people’s homes, and the work gives less educated women an opportunity to earn a reasonable wage that they might not otherwise have.

But Gulnaz says she underestimated the risks.

“I never realised that the threat was so real,” she says.  

Madeeha and Fehmida were two of five health workers killed in the space of 20 minutes that day in 2012. There were three separate attacks in Karachi and another in Peshawar. Another four workers were murdered the following day.

Gulnaz’s family put pressure on her to get a different job.

But she says the tragedy only strengthened her resolve.

“One should not let one’s fear dominate… [otherwise] you can’t do anything.”

But continuing came at a price.

She had to move to a different neighbourhood at the request of her neighbours, and was terrified of another attack. She would frequently change her route to work.

“Initially I was so paranoid that while walking home, [even] if a bike went past me, I used to get scared.”

Gulnaz is one of the 262,000 vaccinators on the front line of the battle against polio. She joined a vaccination team along with Madeeha and Fehmida in Karachi in 2011. They went door-to-door during regular vaccination rounds offering polio drops to all children under five.

Almost 70% of Pakistan’s polio workers are female - women are more likely to be granted access to people’s homes, and the work gives less educated women an opportunity to earn a reasonable wage that they might not otherwise have.

But Gulnaz says she underestimated the risks.

“I never realised that the threat was so real,” she says.  

Madeeha and Fehmida were two of five health workers killed in the space of 20 minutes that day in 2012. There were three separate attacks in Karachi and another in Peshawar. Another four workers were murdered the following day.

Gulnaz’s family put pressure on her to get a different job.

But she says the tragedy only strengthened her resolve.

“One should not let one’s fear dominate… [otherwise] you can’t do anything.”

But continuing came at a price.

She had to move to a different neighbourhood at the request of her neighbours, and was terrified of another attack. She would frequently change her route to work.

“Initially I was so paranoid that while walking home, [even] if a bike went past me, I used to get scared.”

Gulnaz’s family tragedy was the start of a concerted campaign against vaccinators which has resulted in the deaths of more than 94 polio workers and security personnel since 2012, officials say.

Pakistani government and security officials offer funeral prayers for policemen killed in a bomb blast near a polio vaccination centre in Quetta on 13 January, 2016

The violence also marked the start of a dramatic reversal in Pakistan’s battle with polio. There were 58 polio cases reported in the country in 2012, the year Gulnaz’s relatives were killed. By 2014, 307 cases were reported.

In June of that year, the WHO recommended all Pakistani residents be given polio drops at the country’s airports to stop the disease spreading across the world.

Pakistan’s authorities declared “war” against the disease. Vaccination teams were given better security and those working in particularly volatile areas were provided with a police escort.

Hundreds of parents were detained for endangering public safety by refusing vaccinations for their children.

The refusers

Armed Pakistani militants loyal to pro-Taliban cleric Mullah Fazlullah stand at a police station at Matta in Swat district, 6 November 2007.

Pakistan's militants have traditionally been anti-vaccine

Pakistan's militants have traditionally been anti-vaccine

Pakistan’s jittery parents are reacting to decades of national suspicion of the polio vaccine.  

Only a year or so after Pakistan’s national vaccination campaign first began in 2000, a new Pakistani Taliban commander came to prominence.

Mullah Fazlullah, a ruthless idealogue, took control of Swat valley in 2007 and banned the vaccination campaign in the region.

He went on to become head of the Taliban in Pakistan, and was the mullah who ordered the assassination of schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai in 2012.

Mullah Fazlullah

Mullah Fazlullah

Mullah Fazlullah

Back in 2007, he was known as Radio Mullah after he installed several dozen FM transmitters across the valley and used them to broadcast his sermons. He preached against the polio vaccination, arguing it was a Western conspiracy to sterilise Muslims.

The bogus claim created widespread paranoia, which was then compounded by another development in 2011.

Days after Osama Bin Laden - the founder of militant group al-Qaeda who ordered the 9/11 attacks on the US - was killed in a US military raid, a Pakistani doctor was arrested.

Dr Shakil Afridi was accused of helping the CIA track Bin Laden down by running an unauthorised vaccination campaign as a pretext to go door-to-door, looking for him. The story dealt a further blow to Pakistan’s battle to eradicate polio.

And then a year later, in 2012, US drones began targeting militant bases in Pakistan’s tribal areas that border Afghanistan. Taliban commanders in North and South Waziristan banned the polio vaccine in the region, accusing the polio workers of spying for the US.

The bans were eventually lifted when the Pakistani military regained control of the areas under Taliban control, but they were followed by a systematic and sustained anti-vaccination propaganda campaign by mullahs using religion to fuel mistrust.

They issued fatwas [religious decrees] claiming that the polio vaccine contains haram [forbidden by Islam] ingredients such as pig fat, and can make children impotent. The WHO says this is categorically not the case. The anti-vaccine mullahs also stated that the female polio workers were spreading “indecency” and that it was the duty of Muslim men to forcibly marry them.

Pakistan’s jittery parents are reacting to decades of national suspicion of the polio vaccine.  

Only a year or so after Pakistan’s national vaccination campaign first began in 2000, a new Pakistani Taliban commander came to prominence.

Mullah Fazlullah, a ruthless idealogue, took control of Swat valley in 2007 and banned the vaccination campaign in the region.

He went on to become head of the Taliban in Pakistan, and was the mullah who ordered the assassination of schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai in 2012.

Mullah Fazlullah

Mullah Fazlullah

Mullah Fazlullah

Back in 2007, he was known as Radio Mullah after he installed several dozen FM transmitters across the valley and used them to broadcast his sermons. He preached against the polio vaccination, arguing it was a Western conspiracy to sterilise Muslims.

The bogus claim created widespread paranoia, which was then compounded by another development in 2011.

Days after Osama Bin Laden - the founder of militant group al-Qaeda who ordered the 9/11 attacks on the US - was killed in a US military raid, a Pakistani doctor was arrested.

Dr Shakil Afridi was accused of helping the CIA track Bin Laden down by running an unauthorised vaccination campaign as a pretext to go door-to-door, looking for him. The story dealt a further blow to Pakistan’s battle to eradicate polio.

And then a year later, in 2012, US drones began targeting militant bases in Pakistan’s tribal areas that border Afghanistan. Taliban commanders in North and South Waziristan banned the polio vaccine in the region, accusing the polio workers of spying for the US.

The bans were eventually lifted when the Pakistani military regained control of the areas under Taliban control, but they were followed by a systematic and sustained anti-vaccination propaganda campaign by mullahs using religion to fuel mistrust.

They issued fatwas [religious decrees] claiming that the polio vaccine contains haram [forbidden by Islam] ingredients such as pig fat, and can make children impotent. The WHO says this is categorically not the case. The anti-vaccine mullahs also stated that the female polio workers were spreading “indecency” and that it was the duty of Muslim men to forcibly marry them.

Stock image of a pomegranate tree

One such cleric, who had himself issued a fatwa against the vaccine, is Hameedhullah Hameedi.

Hameedi, now in his late 30s, sits in a shaded corner of his courtyard. The sun beats down fiercely but the heat is tempered by a cool breeze which gently shakes two pomegranate trees bright with red flowers.

He looks nervous as he starts to tell his story.

“This is what I had heard from my elders - that the vaccine is bad. That it’s a Western conspiracy to get rid of Muslims, and can make them infertile,” he says.

But finally the persistence of visiting polio teams made him think again.

“One day a polio officer showed me a book which contained fatwas from muftis [Grand Mullahs] of all sects in favour of the vaccine.”

Most fatwas, in fact, are pro-vaccine, rather than anti.

Hameedi made a decision. He called all the men in his village to the local mosque and told them he had decided to go on a journey to meet all the muftis who had issued the pro-vaccine fatwas.

He spent months travelling - visiting Karachi, Peshawar, Lahore, Quetta and other places, meeting religious scholars and questioning them about their views.

When he got back he made a bold move.

“I led the midday prayer in the mosque, and then announced that I had found the answers to my questions about the vaccine.

“I told them that scholars belonging to all Muslim sects believe that it’s not harmful, and that we must give it to our children to protect them from disability.”

Hameedi then gave polio drops to his own children in front of the congregation.

He said the 25 or so men present from his neighbourhood were all relieved and promised they would never refuse the vaccine again.

But winning over those outside his village was another matter. He faced stiff resistance and even death threats.

“Once I had an argument with one of the local men - a Taliban supporter. As soon as I returned home, my phone started ringing… [A man] asked me to stay away from the vaccination campaign, and said my life would be in danger if I didn’t listen.”

He kept receiving similar calls for several months. He says he was nervous, but never for a moment thought of stopping his mission.

“Being a Muslim, I am not afraid of death, I know that it will come at the destined time,” he smiles.

His mission is significant. Hameedi’s home town of Killa Abdullah is in Balochistan province. The area is dominated by the Taliban - close as it is to the Afghan border - and has a strong history of resistance to polio vaccinations.

The cleric says the locals have been led to believe that people working with NGOs have a hidden agenda, and want to convert people to Christianity.

But he says a considerable number of refusals are based on a belief that there should be a reward for getting vaccinated.

“Parents want the government to give them an incentive. They want roads, schools and hospitals - some even want money.”

Despite the resistance, since Hameedi started supporting the vaccination campaign in 2014 the number of polio cases in Killa Abdhullah has decreased. No polio cases have been reported from the area since 2017.

The cleric uses the pronouncements on hygiene in the Koran and other Islamic texts to emphasise the importance of halting the spread of disease.

“My job is tough, but I feel that even if a single child is saved by my efforts, it’s worth taking all the risks.”

His mission is significant. Hameedi’s home town of Killa Abdullah is in Balochistan province. The area is dominated by the Taliban - close as it is to the Afghan border - and has a strong history of resistance to polio vaccinations.

Map

The cleric says the locals have been led to believe that people working with NGOs have a hidden agenda, and want to convert people to Christianity.

But he says a considerable number of refusals are based on a belief that there should be a reward for getting vaccinated.

“Parents want the government to give them an incentive. They want roads, schools and hospitals - some even want money.”

Despite the resistance, since Hameedi started supporting the vaccination campaign in 2014 the number of polio cases in Killa Abdhullah has decreased. No polio cases have been reported from the area since 2017.

The cleric uses the pronouncements on hygiene in the Koran and other Islamic texts to emphasise the importance of halting the spread of disease.

“My job is tough, but I feel that even if a single child is saved by my efforts, it’s worth taking all the risks.”

The persuaders

Abrar walks cautiously on his prosthetic legs, leaning heavily on crutches as he navigates a narrow bumpy street. He clutches an orange folder. He stops in front of a house and knocks on the door, sweating profusely under Karachi’s scorching summer sun.

The door is opened by a tall bearded man - one of many parents in the area who have refused to get their children immunised against polio.

Abrar contracted polio at the age of three and had to have both his legs amputated. He says his uneducated parents were not aware of the importance of vaccination.

He lives in Baldia Town, Karachi. It is a long way from Swat valley, but is home to around 300 families who originally came from the valley in search of work almost 50 years ago. The cultural history of refusal migrated with the families.

There is polio virus present in the town’s sewers and it is considered a high-risk polio corridor due to its location - close to a major highway that extends through Balochistan and right into Afghanistan.

The man on the doorstep is not won over by Abrar’s opening arguments. Abrar takes a brochure on the vaccine from his folder. The man glances at it but looks unimpressed.

“I am not sure about the contents of the polio drops - all I know is that they’re going to destroy my children’s immune systems.

“Why don’t you people leave us alone, why are you so concerned about our children’s health?” he asks.

The oral polio vaccine has no common side-effects, the WHO says, but Abrar regularly comes across this level of scepticism.

Nevertheless, he looks disappointed. He shows the man some more documents, shakes hands with him, and moves on.

How can Pakistan persuade those parents who are determined not to vaccinate their children?

At the foot of Margalla’s lush green hills, on the outskirts of Islamabad, lies an almost impenetrable building surrounded by barriers, armed guards and sniffer dogs. Visitors are extensively searched before being allowed inside.

It could be an army barracks. It is, in fact, Pakistan’s National Emergency Operation Centre, and the headquarters of its polio eradication programme.

Babar Atta, Pakistan’s most senior government official in charge of the programme, talks to me in his office surrounded by charts and graphs. On the wall is a giant map marked with coloured pins to indicate the country’s high risk areas.

Despite the recent setbacks, Pakistan’s polio programme has achieved significant success over the last 25 years.

But any programme of this size would be vulnerable to difficulties.

At the foot of Margalla’s lush green hills, outside Islamabad, lies an almost impenetrable building surrounded by barriers, armed guards and sniffer dogs. Visitors are extensively searched before being allowed inside.

It could be an army barracks. It is, in fact, Pakistan’s National Emergency Operation Centre, and the headquarters of its polio eradication programme.

Babar Atta, Pakistan’s most senior government official in charge of the programme, talks to me in his office surrounded by charts and graphs. On the wall is a giant map marked with coloured pins to indicate the country’s high risk areas.

Despite the recent setbacks, Pakistan’s polio programme has achieved significant success over the last 25 years.

But any programme of this size would be vulnerable to difficulties.

In Pakistan, there are more than 40 million children under the age of five, according to Atta. The government says an average of 500,000 children remain missing from national campaigns, but Atta believes the number is far higher.

“If the polio virus is still present in our environment, it points to just one thing - that we are missing a large number of children in every campaign.”

Children who have been vaccinated are given ink marks on their fingers. But polio vaccine ambassador Abrar had suggested to me that polio workers were marking the fingers of children who hadn’t been vaccinated, to inflate numbers.

Atta agrees this could be happening.

“I have worked in Pakistan’s polio programme for eight years, and I was the one who identified fake finger marking,” he says.

He says one of the reasons the Pakistani public is so suspicious of the polio vaccination programme is because the CIA fake vaccine scandal created such a backlash.

The CIA and doctor accused of being involved have always denied the scheme took place but the Pakistan authorities are adamant it did, and Afridi remains in jail.

“It created mistrust among people - they ask why the West, particularly the US, is so bothered about polio in Pakistan? We will have to de-link the polio programme from the West if we want to make it successful.”

And he is determined to signal that the government will not tolerate fake news surrounding the vaccine. A few weeks after I visited him he announced the government had suspended seven schools in Peshawar found to have been involved in creating “mass hysteria” over the vaccine in April.

Atta is adamant that the key to success is to win parents’ hearts and minds.

“We need to win people over. It’s the parents’ right to ask questions, and it’s the government’s responsibility to respond to them.”


Back on the streets this is down to polio workers like Gulnaz to wrestle with parents’ fears. And in Pakistan’s battle with polio, fear is all too often followed by violence.

“I don’t feel intimidated any more, because I am not alone in this. There are people who are working in more dangerous areas and are doing a far better job. I get a lot of strength from my colleagues, and Allah is with me. I like this job; my heart finds solace in it,” she says.

In Pakistan, there are more than 40 million children under the age of five, according to Atta. The government says an average of 500,000 children remain missing from national campaigns, but Atta believes the number is far higher.

“If the polio virus is still present in our environment, it points to just one thing - that we are missing a large number of children in every campaign.”

Children who have been vaccinated are given ink marks on their fingers. But polio vaccine ambassador Abrar had suggested to me that polio workers were marking the fingers of children who hadn’t been vaccinated, to inflate numbers.

Atta agrees this could be happening.

“I have worked in Pakistan’s polio programme for eight years, and I was the one who identified fake finger marking,” he says.

He says one of the reasons the Pakistani public is so suspicious of the polio vaccination programme is because the CIA fake vaccine scandal created such a backlash.

The CIA and doctor accused of being involved have always denied the scheme took place but the Pakistan authorities are adamant it did, and Afridi remains in jail.

“It created mistrust among people - they ask why the West, particularly the US, is so bothered about polio in Pakistan? We will have to de-link the polio programme from the West if we want to make it successful.”

And he is determined to signal that the government will not tolerate fake news surrounding the vaccine. A few weeks after I visited him he announced the government had suspended seven schools in Peshawar found to have been involved in creating “mass hysteria” over the vaccine in April.

Atta is adamant that the key to success is to win parents’ hearts and minds.

“We need to win people over. It’s the parents’ right to ask questions, and it’s the government’s responsibility to respond to them.”


Back on the streets this is down to polio workers like Gulnaz to wrestle with parents’ fears. And in Pakistan’s battle with polio, fear is all too often followed by violence.

“I don’t feel intimidated any more, because I am not alone in this. There are people who are working in more dangerous areas and are doing a far better job. I get a lot of strength from my colleagues, and Allah is with me. I like this job; my heart finds solace in it,” she says.  

Credits

Author: Shumaila Jaffery

Photography: Faran Rafi, Getty Images, AFP

Illustration: Rebecca Hendin

Online producer: Nathaniel Statton

Editor: Sarah Buckley