Nigeria
has reached a major polio breakthrough and has been removed from the list of
polio-endemic countries after a year of not recording a single case of wild
polio.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) said Nigeria has not
reported a case of wild polio virus since July 24, 2014.
“All laboratory data confirm that 12 months have passed without
any new case in the country.
“Nigeria has brought the world one major step closer to
achieving this goal and it is critical that we seize this opportunity to end
polio for good and ensure that future generations of children are free from
this devastating disease.
“This leaves only Pakistan and Afghanistan as the only countries
with endemic cases of the disease,’’ the organisation said in a statement
issued in Abuja on Saturday.
The statement quoted the Global Polio Eradication Initiative as
describing the development as historic achievement in global healthcare.
WHO issued this statement after the recent Global Polio
Eradication meeting in New York.
The Global Polio Eradication Initiative is spearheaded by
national governments, WHO, Rotary International, the U.S. Centres for Disease
Control and Prevention and United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
The statement recalled that in 2012, Nigeria accounted for more
than half of all polio cases worldwide.
It said that the success was the result of concerted efforts by
all levels of government, civil society groups and religious leaders in the
country.
According to the statement, such support with continued domestic
funding from Nigeria is essential to keep Nigeria and the entire region
polio-free.
Meanwhile President
Muhammadu Buhari has welcomed Saturday’s announcement by the World Health
Organisation that polio is no longer endemic in Nigeria.
President Buhari said he was delighted by the announcement which
followed the absence of any case of the wild polio virus in Nigeria since July
24, 2014.
“The president applauds the concerted efforts of government
officials, health workers, volunteer groups, civil society, religious leaders,
traditional rulers and international partners which resulted in this historic
achievement,” a statement from the presidency said.
“The President directs
all government ministries, departments and agencies involved in the polio
eradication effort to remain proactively engaged and on guard against the
re-emergence of the polio virus in Nigeria.
“He assures the World Health Organisation and the global
community that the Federal Government will ensure that immunisation and
surveillance activities continue across Nigeria to keep the country
polio-free,” the statement said.

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