After the Murder of a Dozen Health Workers, CIA Agrees to Halt Use of Vaccination Programs for Spying

May 21st, 2014 - by admin

Al Jazeera & The Associated Press – 2014-05-21 01:53:24

http://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2014/5/20/cia-will-not-usevaccinationprogramsforspying.html

CIA to Halt Use of Vaccination Programs for Spying
Al Jazeera

(May 20, 2014) — The White House announced that the CIA would stop using vaccination programs as a cover to gather intelligence — a tactic long criticized by humanitarian aid agencies operating in conflict zones around the world.

Lisa Monaco, President Barack Obama’s top counterterrorism adviser, wrote to the deans of 13 prominent public health schools last week, saying that the CIA has agreed it would no longer use vaccination programs or workers for intelligence purposes. The agency also agreed to not use genetic materials obtained through such programs.

A Pakistani doctor, Shakil Afridi, offered a program of hepatitis vaccinations in the Pakistani city of Abbottabad as cover for his CIA-backed effort to obtain DNA samples from children at a compound where Osama bin Laden was later killed.

The White House statement came three days after Pakistan acted to quell a growing polio crisis within its borders. The public health deans had warned last year that the CIA’s use of a vaccination program had played a role in the shootings of several health workers in Pakistan and could hamper anti-polio efforts.

“Public health programs should not be used as cover for covert operations,” they said.

In 2012, the United Nations suspended a polio vaccination effort in Pakistan after gunmen killed several health workers. Taliban militants accused health workers of acting as spies for the US

In her May 16 letter to the health school deans, Monaco said the US “strongly supports the Global Polio Eradication Initiative and efforts to end the spread of the polio virus forever.”

She added that CIA Director John Brennan committed in August 2013 that the agency would “make no operational use of vaccination programs, which includes vaccination workers.” Also saying no DNA or genetic material would be used from such programs, Monaco said the CIA policy “applied worldwide and to US and non-US persons alike.”

Monaco’s letter and the CIA statement did not acknowledge any error in the decision to use the Pakistan vaccine program as a spying cover.

Last week, Pakistan’s Health Ministry announced that it would require that all travelers leaving the country first get a polio vaccination. That move followed the World Health Organization’s declaration earlier this month that polio’s spread was an international public health emergency. The WHO identified Pakistan, Syria and Cameroon as nations that had allowed polio to spread beyond their borders.

Pakistan was the only country with reported endemic polio that saw a rise in new cases in 2012, the health organization reported. Pakistan accounted for more than a fifth of all polio cases identified across the world in 2013.

The CIA’s use of a vaccine program to spy on bin Laden’s compound undercut Obama’s own high-profile speech to the Muslim world in 2009, in which he touted US efforts to slash the growth of polio in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria. With Obama administration assurances, Muslim scholars in two international groups issued religious decrees urging parents to vaccinate their children.


Pakistan Polio Outbreak Grows
Amid Militant Threats

Al Jazeera

(September 2, 2013) — Syed Wali desperately wants to immunize his three young children against polio but fears the Islamic militants who banned the vaccine from this remote area in northwest Pakistan will catch him if he tries to smuggle it in.

“I can afford to bring the vaccine for my children, but what answer will I give the Taliban if they recover the vaccine bag from my possession?” Wali asked.

Wali’s fears are shared by many in the North Waziristan tribal area as health authorities recently confirmed five new polio cases there and suspect there are many more. It’s one of a series of outbreaks this year in parts of the country where security threats have kept out vaccination teams.

Officials worry these outbreaks — inflamed by militant threats and attacks on vaccination teams — could worsen and spread to other parts of Pakistan, especially since the country is entering the high season for virus transmission.

“It’s not like a pot of boiling water where you see bubbles coming from everywhere, but there is steam coming out from specific areas,” said Dr. Elias Durry, emergency coordinator for polio eradication in Pakistan for the World Health Organization. “Our fear is that the virus from these areas can go out and seriously jeopardize the success in fighting polio that has been achieved in the past couple of years.”

Pakistan — one of only three countries left where polio is endemic — had 198 confirmed cases in 2011, the highest number of any nation in the world that year. Pakistan was able to bring that number down to 58 in 2012 through a vaccination program that is supported by the United Nations.

Militant Threats
But the militant threats could reverse that progress. There have been 27 confirmed polio cases in Pakistan so far this year — the third highest total in the world after Somalia and Nigeria. Seventeen of them have occurred in the country’s semiautonomous tribal region, the main sanctuary for Taliban and al-Qaeda militants, Durry said.

Two powerful Pakistani Taliban militants have banned vaccination workers from North and South Waziristan over roughly the past year because of their opposition to U.S. drone strikes. Gunmen have also killed over a dozen vaccinators and police guards in different areas of the country. Many suspect the Taliban of carrying out the murders, although the group has denied the allegation.

Militants have claimed the vaccine is meant to sterilize Muslim children and accused health workers of being U.S. spies. The allegation gained traction after the CIA used a Pakistani doctor to try to confirm the presence of Osama bin Laden in 2011 under the guise of an immunization program.

The threats have left residents like the shopkeeper Wali, who lives in the town of Miran Shah, with the difficult decision of whether to defy the militants by smuggling the vaccine in for his children from the main northwest city of Peshawar.

Some families couldn’t afford to make the six-hour journey to get the vaccine from Peshawar, the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, even if they wanted to take the risk.

Health workers have stationed themselves at two checkpoints protected by the army in North Waziristan, where they are vaccinating children riding by in vehicles. But many people are afraid the militants will find out if they vaccinate their children at the checkpoints.

Global Outbreaks
The polio virus, which usually infects children in unsanitary conditions, attacks the nerves and can kill or paralyze. It can spread widely and unnoticed before it starts crippling children. On average, about one in 200 cases will result in paralysis.

Durry, the WHO official, said authorities have confirmed five polio cases in North Waziristan and three others in the nearby district of Bannu this year.

The five cases in North Waziristan were confirmed since the beginning of August, two of them on Wednesday, said a local health official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media. Officials are still investigating 20 suspected cases, he said.

There have been a total of 12 confirmed cases since the militant ban, the official said. Tribal elders sent to ask the militants to change their minds haven’t been successful, said Jahan Mir, a senior government health official in Miran Shah.

There also have been confirmed polio cases this year in the Khyber tribal area and the provinces of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Sindh and Punjab, Durry said. Health officials had planned to immunize 34 million children across the country, but 1.5 million have not received the vaccine because of security threats, he said.

Threats by al-Qaeda-linked militants also have hampered vaccination efforts this year in Somalia, which has suffered the worst polio outbreak in the world this year. The country has confirmed 108 cases so far, more than all other countries combined, according to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative website. There have been at least 192 confirmed cases worldwide in 2013.

Somalia isn’t even one of the three countries where polio is considered endemic. Those are Pakistan, its neighbor Afghanistan and Nigeria, where Islamic extremists killed polio vaccinators in the northern city of Kano in February.

Irfan Khan, a father of two young children in North Waziristan’s Mir Ali town, said he hoped authorities succeed in appealing to the militants to protect the local population.

“The government and the militants should both compromise to allow children to get the vaccine,” he said.

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