• News
    • Latest news
    • News search
    • Health
    • Finance
    • Food
    • Career news
    • Content series
    • Try Devex Pro
  • Jobs
    • Job search
    • Post a job
    • Employer search
    • CV Writing
    • Upcoming career events
    • Try Career Account
  • Funding
    • Funding search
    • Funding news
  • Talent
    • Candidate search
    • Devex Talent Solutions
  • Events
    • Upcoming and past events
    • Partner on an event
  • Post a job
  • About
      • About us
      • Membership
      • Newsletters
      • Advertising partnerships
      • Devex Talent Solutions
      • Contact us
Join DevexSign in
Join DevexSign in

News

  • Latest news
  • News search
  • Health
  • Finance
  • Food
  • Career news
  • Content series
  • Try Devex Pro

Jobs

  • Job search
  • Post a job
  • Employer search
  • CV Writing
  • Upcoming career events
  • Try Career Account

Funding

  • Funding search
  • Funding news

Talent

  • Candidate search
  • Devex Talent Solutions

Events

  • Upcoming and past events
  • Partner on an event
Post a job

About

  • About us
  • Membership
  • Newsletters
  • Advertising partnerships
  • Devex Talent Solutions
  • Contact us
  • My Devex
  • Update my profile % complete
  • Account & privacy settings
  • My saved jobs
  • Manage newsletters
  • Support
  • Sign out
Latest newsNews searchHealthFinanceFoodCareer newsContent seriesTry Devex Pro
    Sponsored Content
    Council on Foreign Relations
    • News
    • News
    • From our partner

    Polio is back in the horn of Africa

    The return of polio to the Horn of Africa, where the disease had been previously eradicated, illustrates the importance of good governance and security to guarantee thorough and ongoing vaccination campaigns, writes John Campbell, senior fellow for Africa Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations.

    By Devex Editor // 06 June 2013
    A Nigerian child receives an oral vaccine against polio in 2010. A polio virus type 1 is spreading again in Banadir, Somalia and at the Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya. Photo by: Gates Foundation / CC BY-NC-ND

    EDITOR’S NOTE: The return of polio to the Horn of Africa, where the disease had been previously eradicated, illustrates the importance of good governance and security to guarantee thorough and ongoing vaccination campaigns, writes John Campbell, senior fellow for Africa Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations.

    In April, the World Health Organization reported the new presence of wild polio virus type 1 (WPV1) in the Banadir region of Somalia. The initial victim was a thirty-two month old girl. By the end of May, there were four polio cases in Somalia. WHO has also announced a confirmed case of polio at Kenya’s Dadaab refugee camp, the world’s largest, housing 424,000 people from central Africa and the horn, close to the border of Somalia. This is Kenya’s first polio outbreak in two years.

    Somalia had been re-infected with wild polio virus from Nigeria in 2005, resulting in 228 documented cases. That outbreak was eradicated in 2007.

    The governments of Somalia and Kenya and the relevant U.N. agencies are moving quickly to respond. WHO and the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees have launched a campaign to vaccinate 288,000 children under the age of fifteen in the Dadaab refugee camp. The Kenyan government and WHO have launched a polio vaccination campaign in the country’s North East Province. A WHO spokeswoman also announced a campaign to vaccinate 400,000 children in Somalia.

    Polio can spread quickly, particularly in the crowded conditions of refugee camps or in territories ravaged by war. The WHO spokeswoman observes, “polio is a virus that spreads silently. One case presents between 200 and 1,000 people infected. It’s the tip of an iceberg.” Accordingly, The U.S. Center for Disease Control is advising polio vaccination for all travelers to Ethiopia, Djibouti, Somalia, Kenya, South Sudan, Sudan, Uganda, the Central African Republic, Chad, Niger, Nigeria, Mali, Benin, Cameroon, and Tanzania.

    Polio was never entirely eradicated in Nigeria, but it has revived from a low level after the Islamist rebellion in the north ended the polio vaccination campaign. Similarly, in Somalia poor security has precluded a polio vaccination campaign in the south-central part of the country since 2009.

    Testing for the origin of this new polio outbreak is still underway, but preliminary evidence indicates Nigeria. Nigeria, Afghanistan, and Pakistan are the only countries in the world where polio remains endemic.

    This most recent polio episode highlights the importance of thorough and ongoing vaccination campaigns. But in Somalia and Nigeria fighting has resulted in the curtailment of planned vaccination campaigns, and in Kenya, the overcrowding characteristic of refugee camps is a direct result of the fighting in Somalia.

    As in so many other areas, governance and security are proving to be essential to the elimination of a disease.

    Edited for style and republished with permission from the Council on Foreign Relations. Read the original article.

    • Global Health
    Printing articles to share with others is a breach of our terms and conditions and copyright policy. Please use the sharing options on the left side of the article. Devex Pro members may share up to 10 articles per month using the Pro share tool ( ).

    About the author

    • Devex Editor

      Devex Editor

      Thanks a lot for your interest in Devex News. To share news and views, story ideas and press releases, please email editor@devex.com. We look forward to hearing from you.

    Search for articles

    Most Read

    • 1
      How low-emissions livestock are transforming dairy farming in Africa
    • 2
      Opinion: Mobile credit, savings, and insurance can drive financial health
    • 3
      Opinion: India’s bold leadership in turning the tide for TB
    • 4
      How AI-powered citizen science can be a catalyst for the SDGs
    • 5
      WHO names new directors in ongoing restructure
    • News
    • Jobs
    • Funding
    • Talent
    • Events

    Devex is the media platform for the global development community.

    A social enterprise, we connect and inform over 1.3 million development, health, humanitarian, and sustainability professionals through news, business intelligence, and funding & career opportunities so you can do more good for more people. We invite you to join us.

    • About us
    • Membership
    • Newsletters
    • Advertising partnerships
    • Devex Talent Solutions
    • Post a job
    • Careers at Devex
    • Contact us
    © Copyright 2000 - 2025 Devex|User Agreement|Privacy Statement