Polio vaccine campaign begins in Gaza – health official

PALESTINIAN TERRITORIES — A polio vaccination campaign officially began Sunday in the Gaza Strip where the United Nations has announced "humanitarian pauses" to allow for large-scale inoculation, a health official told Agence France-Presse.

The campaign was announced after Gaza recorded its first polio case in a quarter of a century last month.

It officially began on Sunday in three health centers in central Gaza, a day after an unspecified number of children were vaccinated in the southern area of the Gaza Strip.

Children aged from one-day-old to 10 years arrived at the centers to receive the dose as drones flew overhead, said Yasser Shaabane, medical director of Al-Awda hospital in central Gaza said.

"There are a lot of drones flying over central Gaza and we hope this vaccination campaign for children will be calm," said Shaabane.

The campaign began at 9 a.m. (0600 GMT), he said.

The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Thursday that Israel had agreed to a series of three-day "humanitarian pauses" in northern, southern and central areas to facilitate vaccinations.

A health worker administers the Polio vaccine to a baby in Zawayda in the central Gaza Strip on September 1, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas. AFP PHOTO

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu however has insisted that these pauses were not amounting to any kind of ceasefire in overall fighting in Gaza.

The campaign aims to vaccinate more than 640,000 children in the besieged Palestinian territory, devastated by almost 11 months of war.

The campaign also aims to administer the first dose — two drops — to at least 90 percent of the territory's children.

Polio, which had been eradicated in Gaza for 25 years, reappeared in the midst of the hostilities that began on October 7 after Hamas attack on southern Israel.

WHO has dispatched 1.26 million doses of the oral vaccine to Gaza already.

The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza has identified 67 vaccination centers — mostly hospitals, smaller health centers and schools — in central Gaza, 59 in southern Gaza and 33 in northern Gaza to administer the doses.

The second dose of the vaccine must be given four weeks after the first.

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