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By Corinne Podger
BBC science correspondent |
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The World Health Organisation and its partners have reported that polio
is close to being eradicated from the Horn of Africa.
Another 22 million children still need to be vaccinated
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The WHO says Sudan may have beaten polio altogether, with no reported
cases of the disease for over a year.
However the health agency is appealing for continued funding to
eradicate polio worldwide.
Two years ago, there were more than 300 cases of polio a year across
Ethiopia, Somalia and Sudan.
This year, only Somalia has reported cases so far.
Mass campaigns
At a meeting of the Polio Eradication Initiative in Kenya, the
initiative's director, Bruce Aylward, said that polio's days in Africa are
numbered, even in countries where conflicts have ravaged domestic health
systems.
Dr Aylward praised the work of thousands of health officials and
volunteers, whom he said had on occasion literally dodged bullets to carry
out scheduled mass immunisation campaigns.
But he said that another 22 million children have yet to be vaccinated
and getting the vaccine to them will cost at least $50m.
Dr Aylward added that G8 country leaders have promised to keep the WHO
on target to eradicate polio from Africa by 2005.
Now is the time, he says, for those promises made on funding to be
kept.
Otherwise, he says the disease could cross borders from countries where
it is still endemic and return to the Horn of Africa - undoing years of
costly progress.