Tuesday, 21 October 2014

Conspiracy theories fail two dozens "fatwas" in polio-hit Pakistan

October 13, 2014


By ISMAIL DILAWAR




KARACHI: Pakistan eventually has become a country most affected in the world by the crippling disease of polio despite the fact that a number of high profile national and international Islamic scholars and institutions, representing different schools of thought, have issued almost two dozens “fatwas” in favour of polio vaccination facing resistance in the terrorism-hit predominantly Muslim country.

Also included in these religious decrees are the views of what the clergies acknowledge “pious” physicians who not only declare polio vaccination as harmless for health but strongly advise that children, below five, must be administered two drops of polio vaccine during immunization
 campaigns.

Resistance against polio vaccination is deepening thus making the incurable disease endemic in Pakistan which, according to health officials, would break its own record of reporting the highest number of polio cases by the end of this calendar year.

Official figures show that by Oct 1st the number of polio cases reported from across Pakistan stood at 188, of which 165 victims hail from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, four from Baluchistan, two from Punjab and 17 from Sindh.

“It may go up to 250 (cases),” a polio surveillance officer at WHO said, requesting anonymity.

Besides other factors, setbacks like Dr Shakil Afridi’s alleged use of an immunisation campaign to detect, successfully, al-Qaeda chief Usama bin Laden in Abbotabad in May 2011, the critics say, worsened the security situation in Pakistan for polio vaccinators.

Sky is the limit when it comes to conspiracy theories doing the rounds regarding polio campaign in the local anti-West conservative society. More rigid are the inhabitants of militants-infested tribal areas where the GoP is carrying out a military operation to root out terrorist networks.

Of the total 188, at least 33 polio cases have been reported from the Federally Administered Tribal Areas.

"Religious misconceptions is the main reason," the WHO official told Pakistan Today.

To address what Deputy Commissioner Malir Jan Muhammad Qazi said religio-medicinal concerns of the masses, the government had prepared a small booklet of "fatwas" titling “Polio Eradication Campaign and Endorsement by Muslim Scholars”.

The booklet contains stamped religious decrees of clerics from Ahle-Hadith, Deobandi, Barelvi and Shiite sects. Plus the endorsements of "pious" Muslim physicians whose observation stands acceptable to every one.

The Muslim institutions having issued "fatwas" in support of polio vaccination include the Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC), Imam of Aqsa Mosque of Baitul Muqaddas, Ministry of Justice of Egypt, Islamic Ideology Council and Wafaqul Madaris, Jamia Rehmania Ahle Hadees of Multan, scholars of North Waziristan, Mufti Shahbuddin Popalzai of Qasim Ali Khan Mosque in Peshawar, Darul Uloom Deoband Uttar Pardesh (India), Darul Uloom Qadria of Dera Ismail Khan, Musbahul Uloom Al-Jafria, Darul Uloom Arabia, Mazharul Uloom of KPK, Jamiatul Binoria al Alamia of Karachi, Al-Jamiatul Islamia of Balochistan, Al-Jamiatul Arabia of Karachi, Darul Afta Jamia Islamia Arabia Anwarul Uloom, Jamia Khairul Madaris, Jamia Darul Uloom Obaidia Rehmania, Jamia Darul Uloom Baldia Town of Karachi, Darul Uloom Karachi, Jamiatul Binoria Al-Alamia Karachi, Dar-ut-Tafseer Jamiatul Arabia Peshawar, Darul Afta Jamia Darul Uloom Karachi and other religious scholars.

The religious scholars in the above institutions have stressed the need for vaccinating children against polio warning Muslims against heeding to "negative propaganda" against the same.

"We the scholars of North Waziristan, in the light of suggestions given by professional and scrupulous doctors and the supportive views of high profile religious scholars, advise the parents in North Waziristan to get their children vaccinated against polio," decreed jointly by clerics at Darul Uloom Ashrafia, Darul Afta Darul Uloom Nizamia and scholars from Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam of Meeram Shah.

"In our view, polio drops are beneficial for children," stated in a joint decree Maulana Muhammad Hanif Jalindhry of Wafakul Madaris, Mufti Muhammad Ibrahim Qadri of Islamic Ideology Council of Pakistan, Allama Syed Iftikhar Hussain Naqvi of Jamia Imam Khumeni (Mianwali), Allama Zubair Ahmed Zaheer of Jamiat Ahle-Hadees Pakistan and others.

"Some people without having proper knowledge are heeding to rumours and are refusing (polio) vaccination. That is deplorable," said Head of Karachi's Binoria University International Mufti Naeem.

Some resisters reject these "fatwas" arguing that the issuers are religious scholars and not physicians. Keeping this in mind the clerics at Jamia Kharul Madaris of Multan referred Dr Imtiaz Elahi and Dr Javed Hasan, district officer and executive district officer health of Multan, to seek the opinion of a learned but "pious" physician when the government officers reached the seminary for a "fatwa".

"This (vaccine) is a nice medicine to avoid a dangerous disease and contains nothing which is un-Islamic or harmful for health," the seminary finally quoted the mutually-agreed health specialist Doctor Noor Ahmed Noor, former professor of medicine at Nishtar College of Multan.

Hafiz Muhammad Nasrullah of Jamia Rehmani Ahle Hadees (Multan), in a decree said to have taken the views of Dr M Ishaq and Dr Hafeezullah Khan, both Ahle Hadees scholars. "If doctors don't find anything Haram in this vaccine we would have to trust them," says the cleric.

But even such clear religious decrees, the WHO official lamented, were not proving effective. "Besides accessibility problems, illiteracy is the major stumbling block for these Fatwas," he said.

"Most of the people can't read these booklets that renders these fatwas completely useless," the official opined.

On the other hand, he warned, the number of refusals was increasing in the cosmopolitan cities like Karachi which houses 16 of total 17 poliovictims reported from Sindh province.

Upset by ongoing political hustle and bustle and haunted by more possible stringent international sanctions, the GoP has devised, what the WHO official said, an emergency plan to be executed during next six months to effectively deal with the fast spreading disease.

Without divulging details, the official said the plan would remain in place till June next year.

Tuesday, 30 September 2014

Rich students of city’s ‘elite’ schools facing kidnapping threat

Rich students of city’s ‘elite’ schools facing kidnapping threat


* Parents of over half a dozen children put KGS on alert

* Other schools in DHA and Clifton too at risk, says principal

* Dozens of policemen guard KGS, CJM, SZABIST, ICC and LPS

* Schools charging up to Rs700 monthly as “security” charges

* Police registered 99 kidnapping for ransom cases in one year


ISMAIL DILAWAR
KARACHI, September 27, 2014: The children of wealthy businessmen studying in this crime-infested city’s so-called elite schools are facing a serious threat of kidnapping for ransom, Pakistan Today has learnt.

The threatened children are enrolled in the three sections of Karachi Grammar School (KGS), Convent of Jesus & Mary (CJM) I and II, Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Institute of Science and Technology (SZABIST), Iranian Cultural Center (ICC), Links Pre-School (LPS) and other educational institutes mostly located in the posh areas of Defence Housing Authority (DHA) and Clifton.

“Security stands vital for us because some of our children are facing the threat of kidnapping,” KGS Principal Colin Wrigley told Pakistan Today.

Without naming them, the principal said the rich parents of at least half a dozen KGS’s students had formally notified the school that their kids were facing a kidnapping threat.

“May be it is more (than six). But I am guessing only,” Wrigley said adding other schools too were facing the threat. “The kids at CJM schools too are facing this threat,” he said.

The kidnapping threat, the principal said, was one of the major reasons for which the school’s management was tending to restrict the public’s free access to the park-cum-play sports facility his organization was planning to develop on the 5.4-acre “adopted” amenity plot situated between the school’s two campuses near Boating Basin.
The KGS’s plan to develop a sporting site, however, seems to have hit a snag after the civil society organizations like Shehri questioned the school on a controlled usage of the amenity plot under a secret thus dubious agreement with the Karachi Municipal Corporation (KMC).

“Their fathers are rich businessmen and so are usually targeted (by kidnappers),” replied Wrigley.
Asked if KGS had ever suffered any incident of kidnapping the principal replied in affirmative. “Oh yes, a boy was kidnapped less than a year back. That’s why we are so concerned it,” he said without elaborating.

Such uncertain security condition requires the KGS management to take special arrangements to protect its students. “We have dedicated guards, controlled employees (network) and (surveillance) cameras and a proper system in place,” Wrigley said. “We make special arrangements for them (threatened students) to come and go,” the principal said.

Interestingly, while only six of its students are threatened by kidnapers the KGS is charging each of its students with Rs 700 under the head of “security” along with its monthly fee.

According to Wrigley, at least 2,300 students are presently studying at three sections of KGS: around 950 at A- and O-level section, 920 at junior section and the rest at the school’s old Saddar campus.
While Wrigley preferred not to divulge the security arrangements, a police officer deployed at the school’s main gate was not that conscious.

“Up to 49 police personnel stand on guard to avoid any unpleasant happening at KGS as well as other schools like Jesus & Mary (I and II), SZABIST, Iranian (Cultural Center) School and Links (Pre) School,” Sub-Inspector Muhammad Ayub Birhamani told Pakistan Today.

He said at least six to seven policemen perform duty at these schools from 7am to 3pm on a daily basis. “The safety of children is our duty,” he added.

Why only these schools are being guarded? “Because they have requested for security,” the officer replied.
Official record of the heinous crimes like kidnapping for ransom justifies the concerns of KGS and other elite schools.

According to police data, at least 99 cases of kidnapping for ransom were registered in different police stations of this crime-infested city during Sept 5, 2013 and Sept 4 this year.
In preceding year, the police had registered at least 102 cases in which 86 people were kidnapped. This figure marks a nominal reduction of three cases in incidents of kidnapping in the metropolis.

During the ongoing targeted operation, the law enforcers claim to have arrested some 114 accused. Also, the police have shot at least 13 accused compared to 23 they had gunned down last year.
Of those arrested 112 are languishing behind the bars while two are in police custody. -ENDs