NEW YORK -– Microsoft co-founder turned philanthropist Bill Gates urged developed nations to help him wipe out polio "once and for all" at an event to release his third annual letter Jan. 31.
"Eradication will take amazing work, and I truly believe we can succeed," he told a packed room at the house in New York where Franklin D. Roosevelt recovered after being stricken with polio at age 39, before he ran for and won his first term as US president.
"We have the science and the money, so let us pave the way for a future where children, no matter where they live, can face a future without the threat of polio," Gates said.
The world was "on the threshold of ending polio once and for all," but the effort faced "substantial financial challenges" as governments around the world cut aid spending as they tighten budgets, Gates said.
He urged other world leaders to follow the lead of British Prime Minister David Cameron, who with Gates pledged at the World Economic Forum in Davos to donate 130 million dollars to help eradicate the disease.
Days before that, crown prince of Abu Dhabi Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al Nahyan also announced a grant to fight polio.
The disease was all but eradicated in developed nations decades ago, and is on the verge of becoming the second illness after smallpox to be wiped out, with just 946 cases of polio reported around the world last year.
But the potentially fatal disease, which usually affects children, remains endemic in four countries -- Afghanistan, India, Nigeria and Pakistan -- and recently resurfaced in southwest Africa, where there had been no cases since 2000.
"Eradicating polio is not something we can hesitate over now and say we'll get it done later," Gates said.
"If we stop the intense pressure we have put on polio in the last five years the virus will spread again."
The audience included famed violinist Yitzhak Perlman, who contracted polio at age four, Roosevelt's grandson, and grandchildren of Jonas Salk and Albert Sabin, who invented polio vaccines decades ago.
"Polio is kind of like fire. You have to damp it down or it will flare up in places, like it has in Tajikistan or Congo. It's a terrible thing and that is why getting to zero is so important," Gates said.
Gates said the foundation he set up with his wife Melinda could fund 15 percent of the effort to wipe out polio, but called for a "renaissance" of awareness among ordinary people and world governments.
"We've got it way down, but the last one percent is very difficult," Gates said.
Wiping out polio would save the world up to $50 billion over the next 25 years and spare countless children from death or paralysis.
But two billion dollars are needed over the next two years to eradicate polio, and "there's a $720 million shortfall," Gates said.
"If eradication fails because of a lack of generosity on the part of donor countries, it would be tragic," added the billionaire philanthropist, whose foundation gives about $200 million a year to fight the disease.
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Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Billionaire Bill Gates asks world to join together to eradicate polio
From AFP: