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Meet the courageous women ending polio in Afghanistan

PolioFreeAfghanistan
October 21, 2020
Top stories

Noora Awakar Mohammad was only sixteen years old when she started working as a volunteer for the Polio Programme in Afghanistan. Since then, she has lived through civil war and armed conflict in her country, which have left the health infrastructure in tatters. Recalling the days of war, Noora’s face tenses. “During the civil war years, on many occasions the polio campaign was stopped because of intense fighting. As soon as the fighting would stop, we would run to communities to vaccinate children,” she recalls.

During those days, it was mostly elderly women and mothers who trained as vaccinators. The adolescent Noora had to work hard to build community trust. “Often, I stayed with the community and vaccinated the children amidst war. The community trusted me even though I was a young health worker,” she remembers.

An Afghan child receives an ink mark on a finger after being administered polio drops during the first day of a polio vaccination campaign in Dehdaadi district in Bamyan on October 17, 2016.
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Tuesday, 30, Jun
One moment, one decision
Monday, 22, Jun
A young volunteer from Khost has spent the last eight years working to protect children’s future
Sunday, 14, Jun
A young man’s commitment to a safer future for children
Saturday, 13, Jun
The first fIPV & OPV vaccination campaign of the year begins
Monday, 8, Jun
“Polio limited my body, but not my dreams”: The story of Mohammad Salim
Sunday, 31, May
The memory that became a promise to protect children

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