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Two killed in attack on Pakistan polio vaccination security team
Pakistani police officials gather at the site of an attack by gunmen on a polio vaccination team on the outskirts of Quetta on January 18, 2018. (AFP)

Gunmen killed at least two policemen in an attack on a polio vaccination security team in northwest Pakistan on Wednesday, the latest setback in the nation’s campaign to eradicate the disease.


The personnel were part of a nationwide anti-polio drive launched this week, aiming to inoculate tens of millions of children in Pakistan - one of only two countries where the crippling disease remains endemic.


Two gunmen on a motorcycle carried out the attack in the Lal Qila area of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, near the border with Afghanistan, as police were gathering at a health center before heading out with polio vaccinators, said police official Arif Shahbaz.


“The vaccinators were unhurt,” added Shahbaz. Another police officer confirmed the incident and the toll.


The attack comes during a devastating year in Pakistan’s long fight against the disease, with at least 104 cases reported in 2019 so far.


Last year, just 12 cases were reported.


There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Wednesday’s killings, but the Pakistani Taliban and other militants have targeted polio vaccinators in the past.


Vaccination campaigns have faced stubborn resistance for years in Pakistan, with many refusing to have their children inoculated because of misinformation and conspiracy theories.


Islamist opposition to all forms of inoculation grew after the CIA organized a fake vaccination drive to help track down Al Qaeda’s former leader Osama Bin Laden in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad.


But as Pakistan tries to reach its goal of eliminating polio from its territory, a new challenge has emerged in the form of a growing global movement against vaccinations.


Thea phenomenon has attracted adherents worldwide, fueled by medically baseless claims and proliferated by social media resulting in a resurgence of once-eradicated, highly-contagious diseases.


source: AFP