Gates' foundation to fund $1.8bn to eradicate polio

Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahayan announced he will donate $ 120 million

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AFPPTI Abu Dhabi
Last Updated : Apr 25 2013 | 6:54 PM IST
Bill Gates announced in Abu Dhabi today  that his foundation will contribute $ 1.8 billion to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, a third of the total funds needed.
    
 "I am pleased to announce for the foundation that we are committed to fund a third of what is needed for this campaign," the Microsoft co-founder told the Global Vaccine Summit in Abu Dhabi."So for the fully funded campaign, that would be $ 1.8 billion that we are committed to."There has been a total of four billion dollars raised here. That gives us 73 % of the $ 5.5 billion needed, he said.
    
Other participants at the summit also announced their contributions -- $ 457 million from Britain, $ 250 million from Canada, and $ 240 million from Norway.
     
Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahayan announced he will donate $ 120 million.
     
Germany, which had already pledged 100 million euros, announced it will donate a similar amount again. Meanwhile, the Islamic Development Bank offered $ 227 million.
     
The number of worldwide polio infections plunged to 223 in 2012, compared to 360,000 in 1988 when the United Nations launched a campaign to eliminate the highly contagious and crippling illness.
     
Only three countries are still considered polio endemic -- Nigeria, Afghanistan and Pakistan.
     
Nigeria, where an Islamist insurgency in the country's north has taken a hit on immunisation campaigns and at least 10 people were killed in attacks on two vaccination centres in February, saw most of the cases in 2012.
     
At least 20 people have been killed in such attacks in Pakistan since December.
     
Gates, listed by Forbes as the world's second-richest person, had said the global campaign to eliminate polio was currently spending about $ 900 million a year.
     
But Medecins Sans Frontiers (MSF) has criticised the high prices of the vaccines."High prices for new vaccines could put developing countries in the precarious situation of not being able to afford to fully vaccinate their children in the future," warned the medical charity. "Urgent action is needed to address the skyrocketing price to vaccinate a child, which has risen by 2,700 % over the last decade," said Dr Manica Balasegaram, executive director of MSF's Access Campaign. 
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First Published: Apr 25 2013 | 6:51 PM IST

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