Nine female polio vaccinators have been killed in two shootings at health centres in northern Nigeria.
In the first attack in Kano the polio vaccinators were shot dead by gunmen who drove up on a motor tricycle.
Thirty minutes later gunmen targeted a clinic outside Kano city as the vaccinators prepared to start work.
Some Nigerian Muslim leaders have previously opposed polio vaccinations, claiming they could cause infertility.
On Thursday, a controversial Islamic cleric spoke out against the polio vaccination campaign, telling people that new cases of polio were caused by contaminated medicine.
Some Kano residents told news men in the city, that those injured in the first attack had been taken to hospital.
A health official confirmed that those killed in the second attack in Hotoro were female health workers - there were earlier reports that people waiting at the clinic had been among those shot.
Witnesses in Hotoro told news men that gunmen also approached the health centre using a motor tricycle.
Kano banned motorbikes from carrying passengers after a recent attack on the prominent Muslim leader, the emir of Kano.
Analysts believe the attacks may have been the work of the militant Islamist group Boko Haram but it has not yet commented.
The group - whose name translates as "Western education is forbidden" - says it is fighting to overthrow the government and impose Sharia.
It has been blamed for the deaths of some 1,400 people in central and northern Nigeria since 2010.
Along with Afghanistan and Pakistan, Nigeria is one of only three countries where polio is still endemic.
In the past month, polio workers have also been targeted and killed in Pakistan, where the Taliban have threatened anti-polio efforts - accusing health workers of working as US spies and alleging that the vaccine makes children sterile.
culled from the BBC.
Word for the Day: “Peace cannot be kept by force; it can only be achieved by understanding.” ― Albert Einstein
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