Doctors observe ‘black day’ today
By our correspondents
December 01, 2015
PESHAWAR: The Provincial Doctors Association (PDA) has condemned the killing of Dr Mohammad Yaqoob, head of Expanded Programme on Immunisation (EPI) in the Swabi district, and announced to mourn his death across the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa by observing Tuesday as a black day.
In a statement issued here Monday, the PDA spokesman Dr Amir Taj said doctors would continue provision of services to the patients as they don’t want the poor patients to suffer.He, however, said the doctor community across the province would protest the killing of Dr Mohammad Yaqoob by wearing black ribbons on arms.
The PDA demanded earlier arrest of his killers and sought protection for the doctor community serving in the province and its adjoining tribal areas.Dr Mohammad Yaqoob was shot dead while his driver was seriously injured when unknown gunmen riding motorcycles opened fired at them in Swabi on Monday.
Sources close to the slain doctor told The News he had no enmity. “He was an honest and a hardworking doctor. But as far as I know, he had no enmity or any personal issue that could take his life,” a senior official associated with the immunisation programme said.
He said though Swabi was not a ‘high risk’ area in terms of security threats to lives of the polio teams, he said polio workers and those associated with immunisation programme had come under attack from the militants in the past.
In a statement issued here Monday, the PDA spokesman Dr Amir Taj said doctors would continue provision of services to the patients as they don’t want the poor patients to suffer.He, however, said the doctor community across the province would protest the killing of Dr Mohammad Yaqoob by wearing black ribbons on arms.
The PDA demanded earlier arrest of his killers and sought protection for the doctor community serving in the province and its adjoining tribal areas.Dr Mohammad Yaqoob was shot dead while his driver was seriously injured when unknown gunmen riding motorcycles opened fired at them in Swabi on Monday.
Sources close to the slain doctor told The News he had no enmity. “He was an honest and a hardworking doctor. But as far as I know, he had no enmity or any personal issue that could take his life,” a senior official associated with the immunisation programme said.
He said though Swabi was not a ‘high risk’ area in terms of security threats to lives of the polio teams, he said polio workers and those associated with immunisation programme had come under attack from the militants in the past.
-
Melissa Jon Hart Explains Rare Reason Behind Not Revisting Old Roles -
Meghan Markle Eyeing On ‘Queen’ As Ultimate Goal -
Japan Elects Takaichi As First Woman Prime Minister After Sweeping Vote -
Kate Middleton Insists She Would Never Undermine Queen Camilla -
King Charles 'terrified' Andrew's Scandal Will End His Reign -
Winter Olympics 2026: Lindsey Vonn’s Olympic Comeback Ends In Devastating Downhill Crash -
Adrien Brody Opens Up About His Football Fandom Amid '2026 Super Bowl' -
Barbra Streisand's Obsession With Cloning Revealed -
What Did Olivia Colman Tell Her Husband About Her Gender? -
'We Were Deceived': Noam Chomsky's Wife Regrets Epstein Association -
Patriots' WAGs Slam Cardi B Amid Plans For Super Bowl Party: She Is 'attention-seeker' -
Martha Stewart On Surviving Rigorous Times Amid Upcoming Memoir Release -
Prince Harry Seen As Crucial To Monarchy’s Future Amid Andrew, Fergie Scandal -
Chris Robinson Spills The Beans On His, Kate Hudson's Son's Career Ambitions -
18-month Old On Life-saving Medication Returned To ICE Detention -
Major Hollywood Stars Descend On 2026 Super Bowl's Exclusive Party