WHO confirms Nigeria’s 3rd Polio case
The
World Health Organization has confirmed a third case of polio in
Nigeria, Rotary Club said Monday: a crippled toddler found in an area
newly liberated from Boko Haram Islamic extremists.
The
West African nation that once was the global epicenter of the wild polio
virus had been declared polio-free last year, along with the African
continent. But two cases were discovered last month among refugees from
areas recently won back by Nigeria's military from Boko Haram.
More
cases are expected to be discovered in these areas. It is an indicator
that Nigeria's war on polio cannot be won until it overcomes the
insurgency by extremists who are violently opposed to Western medicine.
Rotary
Club's field coordinator, Aminu Muhammad, told The Associated Press the
new case was found in Monguno local government area. The others were
farther south in Jere and Gwoza. All are in northern Borno state.
Rotary
is participating in a new emergency immunization drive that vaccinated
more than 1.5 million children last week in Borno, where WHO has said
the virus has been circulating undetected for five years and where Boko
Haram began its Islamic uprising in 2009.
The campaign is to spread across the country, with a plan to reach 25 million children before the end of the year.
But the U.N. Children's Fund has warned that about 1 million children are in areas too dangerous to access.
Nigeria's
military has helped with the vaccination drive, which included
logistics and other aid from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, the
United Nations and Britain's Save the Children as well as government
health workers. Military helicopters flew vaccines into places too
dangerous to reach by road, and truckloads of troops and armored cars
escorted vaccinators elsewhere.
Muhammad said they were using "hit and run" tactics to reach kids in areas where Boko Haram is present.
Nigeria's
military has said it has the insurgents "on the run" and needs only to
clear them out of areas bordering Cameroon, Chad and Niger as well as
their northeastern stronghold in the Sambisa Forest. But a map used in
the vaccination campaign shows almost all of Borno state is only
“partially accessible,” with four northern areas "inaccessible" and only
the extreme south "accessible."
VOA
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