World health official: UAE polio fundraiser comes at pivotal moment in eradication efforts 

A health worker administers polio vaccine drops to a child during a vaccination campaign in Peshawar, Pakistan in 2023. (AFP/File)
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Updated 04 December 2025
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World health official: UAE polio fundraiser comes at pivotal moment in eradication efforts 

  • Dr. Hanan Balkhy, WHO’s Eastern Mediterranean director, says pledging event will boost efforts to wipe out the disease in Pakistan and Afghanistan 
  • Abu Dhabi set to host conference to help fill budget gaps in Global Polio Eradication Initiative 

LONDON: A major fundraising event to bolster the global campaign to eradicate polio will take place at a pivotal time in regional efforts to stop the disease, health officials said on Thursday. 

The UAE is hosting a “pledging moment” next week to build investment in the Global Polio Eradication Initiative. 

The campaign has helped wipe out the disease across most of the world, but wild polio remains endemic in just two countries: Pakistan and Afghanistan. 

Doctors overseeing vaccination efforts believe the coming months could see a major leap toward eradicating polio in both countries.  

Dr. Hanan Balkhy, the World Health Organization’s regional director for the Eastern Mediterranean, said the fundraising event in Abu Dhabi comes at “exactly the right time to support countries through critical, low transmission seasons.” 

The spread of the disease slows during winter when vaccination campaigns can be most effective. 

Wild polio was close to being eradicated in 2022, but case numbers in Pakistan and Afghanistan began to rise again in 2023 and spiked the following year. 

Speaking ahead of the fundraiser, Balkhy, a Saudi physician who was appointed to her WHO role last year, said that transmission is declining again in both countries and that the winter months offered a perfect opportunity to finally break its grip. 




Dr. Hanan Balkhy, the World Health Organization’s regional director for the Eastern Mediterranean, said there is now a pivotal epidemiological window to end polio in Pakistan and Afghanistan. (AN Photo)

“We now enter a pivotal epidemiological window, where the upcoming low transmission season offers the strongest opportunity since 2022 to interrupt wild polio, but only if we focus relentlessly on the areas where the virus persists,” she said. 

Asked when the disease would finally be eradicated, she said that the ambition is “this season.” 

“We're so, so close,” she said. “We need to finish this today. We need to finish it this low season.” 

Since the initiative began in 1988, dramatic progress has been made against polio through extensive vaccination campaigns.  

Thirty years ago, the virus paralyzed 1,000 children a day across 125 countries. In 2021, just six cases were reported worldwide, but the final hurdle toward eradication has proved particularly difficult. 

A further challenge has been the vaccine-derived form of the virus, which affects parts of Africa and Yemen. An outbreak in Gaza last year was brought under control by a major UAE-funded immunization drive. 

The pledging event on Monday comes as the GPEI faces a 30 percent budget cut for 2026 and a $1.7 billion funding gap up to 2029. The shortfalls are largely down to a major reduction in foreign aid from the US and some European countries. 

Gulf countries have continued their strong support for the GPEI, a coalition that includes WHO, the Gates Foundation, and UNICEF. 

Balkhy said Saudi Arabia’s commitment of $500 million to the initiative last year represented a “transformative investment.” 

The UAE is also a major supporter, committing more than $380 million to eradicating the disease since 2011. 

Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar are all key backers of the Polio Legacy Challenge, which aims to help eradicate the disease in Afghanistan by strengthening health systems and improving vaccination campaigns. 

The fundraising conference on Monday will be the third hosted by Abu Dhabi with pledges for the initiative. 

Tala Al-Ramahi from the Mohamed Bin Zayed Foundation for Humanity, which is organizing the event, said conferences in 2013 and 2016 pulled in $6.6 billion in global commitments. 

She said this year's event could not come at a more critical time. 

“We have never been closer to eradication, but global funding constraints are threatening that progress. Without full-funded global eradication efforts, surveillance, vaccination, and outbreak response, the backbone of ending polio will slow at the exact moment the virus is at its weakest.” 

Al-Ramahi said that if momentum is lost, a resurgent polio virus could paralyze up to 200,000 children a year. 

Steven Lauwerier, UNICEF’s director for polio eradication, said the Abu Dhabi event will be an opportunity to renew both financial and political commitments to polio eradication. 

“With a fully funded program, we vaccinate about 400 million children a year,” he said. “This is one of the most successful programs globally in partnerships that are reaching and having impact every day for thousands and thousands of children.”


UN rights chief shocked by ‘unbearable’ Darfur atrocities

Updated 19 January 2026
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UN rights chief shocked by ‘unbearable’ Darfur atrocities

  • Mediation efforts have failed to produce a ceasefire, even after international outrage intensified last year with reports of mass killings, rape, and abductions during the RSF’s takeover of El-Fasher in Darfur

PORT SUDAN: Nearly three years of war have put the Sudanese people through “hell,” the UN’s rights chief said on Sunday, blasting the vast sums spent on advanced weaponry at the expense of humanitarian aid and the recruitment of child soldiers.
Since April 2023, Sudan has been gripped by a conflict between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces that has left tens of thousands of people dead and around 11 million displaced.
Speaking in Port Sudan during his first wartime visit, UN Human Rights commissioner Volker Turk said the population had endured “horror and hell,” calling it “despicable” that funds that “should be used to alleviate the suffering of the population” are instead spent on advanced weapons, particularly drones.
More than 21 million people are facing acute food insecurity, and two-thirds of Sudan’s population is in urgent need of humanitarian aid, according to the UN.
In addition to the world’s largest hunger and displacement crisis, Sudan is also facing “the increasing militarization of society by all parties to the conflict, including through the arming of civilians and recruitment and use of children,” Turk added.
He said he had heard testimony of “unbearable” atrocities from survivors of attacks in Darfur, and warned of similar crimes unfolding in the Kordofan region — the current epicenter of the fighting.
Testimony of these atrocities must be heard by “the commanders of this conflict and those who are arming, funding and profiting from this war,” he said.
Mediation efforts have failed to produce a ceasefire, even after international outrage intensified last year with reports of mass killings, rape, and abductions during the RSF’s takeover of El-Fasher in Darfur.
“We must ensure that the perpetrators of these horrific violations face justice regardless of the affiliation,” Turk said on Sunday, adding that repeated attacks on civilian infrastructure could constitute “war crimes.”
He called on both sides to “cease intolerable attacks against civilian objects that are indispensable to the civilian population, including markets, health facilities, schools and shelters.”
Turk again warned on Sunday that crimes similar to those seen in El-Fasher could recur in volatile Kordofan, where the RSF has advanced, besieging and attacking several key cities.
Hundreds of thousands face starvation across the region, where more than 65,000 people have been displaced since October, according to the latest UN figures.