By Good News Network
Thursday, July 01, 2010

Rotary International made a promise to help kick polio out of Africa, and this month, with a football signed by Nobel Laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu, the group wraps up a massive immunization mobilization this spring that targeted more than 100 million African children under the age of five, bringing their dream to the brink of reality.
At the humanitarian organization’s annual convention held in Montreal last week, the football -- signed also by dignitaries from more than 20 African nations -- was presented to Rotary president John Kenny to thunderous applause.
When former President Nelson Mandela launched the Kick Polio out of
Africa campaign originally in 1996, almost all countries in Africa were
still suffering from polio. Today, polio eradication is nearly complete
across Africa. Nowhere is progress more evident than in Nigeria -- the
last remaining polio endemic country on the continent – where case
numbers have plummeted by 99 percent, from 312 cases at this time last
year, to three cases in 2010.
"Polio eradication is not optional — it is an obligation," said
Marie-Irène Richmond-Ahoua, Rotary’s National PolioPlus Committee
Chair, as she presented the honorary ball. "We must commit to
overcoming the remaining obstacles and free Africa from this crippling
disease, which ruins the lives of children."
Tapping the continent’s excitement over the 2010 World Cup, the signed
football culminates Rotary’s Kick Polio Out of Africa Campaign, the
four-month, Pan-African public awareness and immunization campaign.
The ball passed through 23 polio-affected countries en route to
Montréal. However, the Kick-Out finale was held in Alexandria, where
Egyptian National footballer Islam El-Shater kicked the ball into the
Mediterranean Sea — symbolically kicking the disease off the continent.
“While most of the world is polio-free, it still threatens children in
parts of Africa, Asia and the Middle East,” said Rotary International
President John Kenny. “Kick Polio out of Africa
shows the tremendous resolve of our global partners -- the World Health
Organization, UNICEF, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention -- to come together to fight this disease."
In his keynote address at the Rotary Convention on June 22, Bruce
Aylward, director of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative at the
World Health Organization (WHO), encouraged the thousands of Rotary
members in attendance to share the "terrific news" that polio is on the
run, and that Rotary’s vision of a polio-free world is within sight.
“In the past 12 months you have
proved, without a doubt, that polio can be eradicated. The world has
also learned the full consequences of failure," said Aylward, referring
to a current polio outbreak in Tajikistan which is now showing signs of
stopping.
Beginning in 1985, when polio paralyzed more than 350,000 children in
125 countries every year, eradication has been Rotary’s top
philanthropic goal. Since then, polio cases have been slashed by 99
percent worldwide, with fewer than 1,700 cases in 2009. Just four
countries remain polio-endemic: Nigeria, Afghanistan, India, and
Pakistan. However, other nations remain at risk for infections
“imported” from the endemic countries.
As the volunteer arm and top private sector contributor in the polio
eradication initiative, Rotary has contributed more than $900 million
and countless volunteer hours to immunize more than two billion
children in 122 countries.
Learn more at
www.kickpoliooutofafrica.org