Skip to main content

Africa celebrates one year without polio: UN

Africa has marked one year since the last case of recorded polio, with the United Nations celebrating Wednesday a key step towards eradicating the disease.
The last recorded case on the continent was in Somalia in Aug. 11 2014, although health officials must wait two more years before declaring the continent free from the highly infectious, crippling virus.

The UN children's agency UNICEF, which plays a key role in polio vaccinations, called it an "extraordinary achievement" but warned it was "not an end point."
Success depends on the continuation of vaccination campaigns and close monitoring of possible cases, it said.
"We have had no new cases for a year despite all the challenges in the country," UNICEF's chief for Somalia Steven Lauwerier told AFP on Wednesday.
"We never want to see another Somali child being paralyzed by this preventable virus. That means we need to continue to support the vaccination campaigns to ensure polio is completely eradicated."
Nigeria marked one year since its last recorded case of polio in July. It is one of only three countries -- along with Pakistan and Afghanistan -- where the virus remains endemic.
"Globally, we are on the verge of totally eradicating a disease for only the second time in history," UNICEF polio chief Peter Crowley said, referring to the elimination of smallpox.
The rollback of polio is "a powerful symbol of the progress that has been made on the African continent over the past generation," Crowley said.
A polio-free Africa would leave only Pakistan and Afghanistan where the disease had not been wiped out, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), which said the one-year mark was a key signal of the "important progress toward eradication."
However, it has also warned there may have been cases that had gone unrecorded in Africa.
Polio is easily prevented through a vaccine, but there is no cure. Transmitted from person-to-person, often through faeces, it mainly affects children under five.
Initial symptoms can include fever and pains in the limbs, and can lead to permanent paralysis.

Comments

Popular Posts

Many people thought Nollywood actor, IK Ogbonna and his Colombian fiancee were crazy when the duo hooked up off a couple of romantic exchanges over the Instagram. With barely anything to hold on to, the Colombian Sonia Lareinaa left her family and country to come to Nigeria to settle with her hunk here. With open hands IK welcomed her. It is stuff made of crazy love. “She’s an awesome person and we met off social media; I left a breakup and at that point in time I was really not thinking of getting into any relationship. A friend of mine pointed her instagram page to me and I wasn’t really interested in surfing the internet at that point in time, but then again, I had a second look at her page and I was liking her pictures and unconsciously she was liking my pictures and from there, we started talking and it was almost as if it was just meant to be. It was just two people with like minds coming together with a lot of positive chemistry being built up and then before you know anyt...

IS suicide bomber in guise of a woman kills 10 at Yemen Houthi mosque

At least 10 Muslim worshippers performing Eid al-Adha prayers were killed on Thursday when an Islamic State suicide bomber disguised as a woman blew himself up at a mosque run by Yemen's Houthi group, security sources said. Islamic State's branch in Yemen said the attack at al-Balili mosque, just outside the Old City of Sanaa, had killed or wounded dozens of "rejectionists". The Sunni militant group uses that term to describe Shi'ite Muslims it deems to be heretics.