By Ashrafuddin Pirzada
MUSCAT(Oman): Eminent Islamic religious scholars from Afghanistan and Pakistan on Monday have reiterated that polio vaccines are not only safe and in compliance with Islamic principles but it also a religious and moral duty incumbent on all parents to save the lives of their children.
In a joint declaration issued at the Afghanistan-Pakistan Eminent Ulama Conference after thorough discussion said that Islamic laws have not declared polio drops against Sharia as it has no harm to religon.
The Conference was an innovative step in the global effort to stop poliovirus, under the aegis of the Islamic Advisory Group for polio eradication (IAG).
For the first time, the IAG convened religious scholars from both sides of the Afghanistan-Pakistan border in a bid to appreciate their value as community leaders and to secure bilateral support for polio eradication efforts across the joint corridors through which the virus is being transmitted.
This came as one of the prominent recommendatios of the Fifth Annual Islamic Advisory Group Meeting in 2018, bringing together around 30 Islamic scholars from the two countries together with representatives of IAG partner organizations from Al-Azhar Al-Sharif, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) and the Islamic Development Bank (IsDB).
As the last remaining bastions of wild poliovirus are in the bordering areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan, the two countries are tackling challenges ranging from poor health systems to community mistrust. As global polio eradication efforts address the former, advocates including religious scholars are essential to addressing the latter and persuading parents of the safety and efficacy of vaccines.
The Conference was inaugurated by His Excellency Doctor Darwish bin Saif Al-Maharbi, Undersecretary for Administrative and Financial Affairs, Ministry of Health, Oman and his Eminence Sheikh Doctor Kahlan bin Nabhan Al Kharusi, Assistant Grand Mufti of Oman who welcomed the participants and prayed for their success.
"Children are precious in the eyes of Islam, which requires us to call for their protection," said Dr Al-Kharusi while referring to the weight of responsibility in issuing fatwas and the role of scholars in clarifying Islamic rulings to the general public.
In his address during the opening session of the conference, his excellency the deputy of Al-Azhar Al Sharif, Dr Saleh Abbas Goma Saleh, called upon parents to vaccinate their children to protect them from harm.
“The family bears the responsibility of the proper upbringing of, and caring for children and maintaining their health,” he said. “It is disturbing to see parents neglect their responsibilities and leave their sons or daughters at risk of illness and disability, with those neglected dependents sometimes ending up suffering from chronic physical and psychological disorders.”
He also assured the participating scholars from Afghanistan and Pakistan that the fatwa-issuing partners of the IAG support the use of vaccination.
“Al-Azhar Al-Sharif’s Islamic research academy and the International Islamic Fiqh Academy (IIFA) have authorized countries and governments to require people’s use of preventive immunization as a means of stopping epidemics and preventing their spread. The Secretariat of the Academy denounced those fatwas prohibiting vaccinations and called upon preachers and imams to invite people to welcome vaccination campaigns.”
“The sole purpose of all vaccination teams is to serve humanity, and to completely eradicate numerous communicable diseases, which represent an onerous burden, and could turn into global epidemics.”
“Let us unite in exerting efforts and come to an equitable common word for the good of humankind.”
The World Health Organization Regional Director for the Eastern Mediterranean (EMRO), Dr Ahmed Al-Mandhari, spoke at length about th
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