Gates Foundation pledges $1.2 billion to eradicate polio as floods in Pakistan impede immunization

A health worker administers polio vaccine drops to a child at a school during a door-to-door polio vaccination campaign in Lahore on August 22, 2022. (AFP)
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Updated 17 October 2022
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Gates Foundation pledges $1.2 billion to eradicate polio as floods in Pakistan impede immunization

  • The foundation says the situation in Pakistan has underscored the urgent need to finish the job against polio
  • Countries that had previously eliminated all forms of poliovirus have recently reported new detections of the virus

BERLIN: The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation on Sunday pledged to invest $1.2 billion toward wiping out polio as health experts from around the world gathered for a summit in Berlin. 
“Polio eradication is within reach. But as far as we have come, the disease remains a threat,” Bill Gates, co-chair of the foundation, said in a statement. 
The sum will be donated to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), a public-private partnership led by national governments that aims to end the disease by 2026. 
Polio is a highly contagious illness caused by a virus that enters the central nervous system and damages cells in the spinal cord and brain. 
The disease can be fatal, and those who survive are often left paralyzed or with atrophied and twisted limbs. 
Polio most often affects children under the age of five but can hit anyone who is not vaccinated. 
Since its launch in 1988, the GPEI has helped reduce polio cases by more than 99 percent worldwide and prevented more than 20 million cases of paralysis, the foundation said in a statement. 
Pakistan and Afghanistan are the only two countries where the wild poliovirus remains endemic, though Malawi and Mozambique also detected imported wild polio cases in 2022. 
“Despite this historic progress, interruptions in routine immunization, vaccine misinformation, political unrest, and the tragic floods in Pakistan in 2022 have underscored the urgent need to finish the job against polio,” the foundation said. 
Another concern is that “countries that had previously eliminated all forms of poliovirus have recently reported new detections of the virus,” such as Britain and the US, it said. 
Partners in the GPEI include the World Health Organization (WHO), Rotary International and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). 


Pakistan, Saudi Arabia discuss regional situation, upcoming engagements

Updated 14 February 2026
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Pakistan, Saudi Arabia discuss regional situation, upcoming engagements

  • Ishaq Dar and Prince Faisal bin Farhan agree to stay in contact amid Middle East tensions
  • The two officials speak ahead of Trump’s Feb. 19 Board of Peace meeting in Washington, DC

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar discussed regional developments and upcoming international engagements with Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan in a phone call on Saturday, according to the foreign office in Islamabad.

The conversation took place against the backdrop of deepening strategic ties between Islamabad and Riyadh. In September last year, the two countries signed a bilateral defense agreement that formalized decades of military cooperation and included a commitment to view aggression against one as an attack on both countries.

“Deputy Prime Minister/Foreign Minister Mohammad Ishaq Dar held a telephonic conversation today with the Foreign Minister of Saudi Arabia, Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud,” Pakistan’s foreign ministry said in a statement.

“The two leaders discussed the evolving regional situation, forthcoming international engagements, and agreed to remain in close contact,” it added.

The two officials spoke at a time of heightened tensions in the Middle East, with the conflict in Gaza far from resolution amid ongoing ceasefire violations by Israel.

The region has also been on edge as the United States pursues nuclear negotiations with Iran, prompting regional states to call for diplomacy rather than new military flare-ups.

Both Pakistan and Saudi Arabia are participants in US President Donald Trump’s Board of Peace, which is scheduled to meet on Feb. 19 in Washington.

Islamabad and Riyadh have consistently coordinated positions over regional and global issues.

The foreign ministry did not provide further details of the discussion.