06:52 24/07/2015
London - Nigeria marked its first year without a single case of
polio on Friday, reaching a milestone many experts had thought would
elude it as internal conflict hampered the battle against the crippling
disease.
It means the country could come off the list of countries
where polio is endemic in a few weeks, once the World Health
Organization (WHO) can confirm that the last few samples taken from
people in previously affected areas are free of the virus.
This achievement turns up the pressure on Pakistan, where most of the few polio cases in the world remain, to follow suit.
Nigeria's
polio-free period, dating from July 24, 2014, is the longest it has
gone without recording a case. The hope is that next month the entire
African continent will have gone a full year without a polio infection,
with the last case recorded in Somalia on August 11, 2014.
All
this brings tantalisingly closer the prospect that polio will soon
become only the second human infectious disease after smallpox to be
eradicated.
"It's an extraordinary achievement. It really shows
the value of government leadership and taking ownership of the
programme," said Carol Pandak, the director of Rotary International's
polio program.
A disease that until the 1950s crippled thousands
of people a year in rich and poor nations alike, the poliomyelitis virus
attacks the nervous system and can cause irreversible paralysis within
hours of infection.
It often spreads among young children and in
areas with poor sanitation - a factor that gives it freedom in areas of
conflict and unrest. But it can be halted with comprehensive,
population-wide vaccination.
Nigeria had struggled to contain
polio since some northern states imposed a year-long vaccine ban in
mid-2003. Some state governors and religious leaders in the
predominantly Islamic north alleged the vaccines were contaminated by
Western powers to spread sterility and HIV/AIDS among Muslims.
Traditional
leaders throughout the country pledged in January 2009 to support
immunisation campaigns and push parents to have their children
vaccinated. But at about the same time Boko Haram militants began a
bloody insurgency to carve out an Islamist state in the northeast.
Driving the project
In 2012, Nigeria still seemed to be losing the battle against polio, recording more than half of all the world's cases.
But
Oyewale Tomori, Nigeria's chairman of the Expert Review Committee on
Polio Eradication says Abuja's prioritisation of the polio fight,
including establishing emergency operations centres to coordinate
vaccination campaigns and reach children in previously inaccessible
areas, helped drive the project on.
Tactics such as engaging the
traditional and religious leaders, and polio survivors in immunisation
campaigns and using thousands of voluntary workers to build trust, were
also vital, as will be the continuation of high levels of vaccine
coverage to keep the virus at bay.
"We're well on the way," Tomori told Reuters. "It's a time of great happiness, but we don't want to celebrate prematurely."
Since
the Global Polio Eradication Initiative was launched in 1988, there has
been a more than 99 percent reduction in polio cases worldwide.
Back
then the disease was endemic in 125 countries and caused paralysis in
nearly 1,000 children a day. By contrast, so far in 2015, there were
only 33 new cases worldwide - 28 of them in Pakistan, with the rest in
Afghanistan.
Nigeria
still has two more years before it, along with the whole of Africa, can
be certified officially polio-free by WHO, but health experts say its
achievement bodes well for wiping the disease out. Global health experts
still hold out hope for an end to polio worldwide by 2018.
Pandak
says it's now Islamabad's turn to feel the huge international pressure
Abuja came under to commit itself to finding every last polio case and
vaccinating every last child.
"When you're the last country in a
region to still have polio, there's a lot of pressure from the global
community and from your neighbours," she said.
"Everybody spurs
you on, polio gets talked about at the highest levels of government, and
that pressure is something Pakistan is acutely politically aware of."
While
Pakistan has more polio cases than anywhere else this year -
neighbouring Afghanistan has recorded five - it is doing better, with 70
percent fewer cases this year than last.
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