May 14, 2005

silhouette3.JPG From the desk of Jane Galt:

The light at the end of the tunnel

My grandfather, who died lass year, was an active participant in the Rotary's campaign to wipe out polio worldwide. He was disheartened when the campaign was derailed by muslim clerics in Nigeria, who began telling people that the polio vaccinations were an American plot to make their daughters infertile. Nigerian strains have now spread to 16 countries that thought they had eliminated the virus.

Now, however, it looks like they've gotten back on track:

Next month Rotary International turns 100. Rotary clubs, a staple of small-town life, are celebrating the construction of innumerable parks, the holding of myriad blood drives, the awarding of countless college scholarships - and the imminent global eradication of polio.

Twenty years ago, there were a thousand new cases of polio every day. Now polio strikes only about a thousand children a year. By next year, that number should be zero. People who think of Rotary as a congregation of service-minded dentists and funeral directors may not have noticed, but the dentists and funeral directors have created the largest, most successful private health initiative ever.

When Rotary celebrated its 75th birthday, its leaders decided to find a project that all its clubs - now in 168 countries - could work on together. A Rotarian ophthalmologist in the Philippines, where polio was rampant, asked Rotary to vaccinate Filipino children. It vaccinated six million, then made similar efforts in five other nations. In 1985, Rotary decided to wipe out polio completely.

By the time polio is eradicated, Rotary clubs will have directly contributed at least $600 million, more than any other organization except the United States government. And they offer more than cash.
...
"Every polio meeting you go to, you see them," said Rima Salah, deputy executive director of Unicef. "They have commitment, credibility and influence with leaders." This is crucial, as the challenge today is political. In August 2003, Muslim clerics from the northern Nigerian state of Kano charged that America had laced the polio vaccine with drugs to render African girls infertile. Kano stopped vaccinating. Kano's cases doubled, and Nigerian strains of polio have spread to 16 other nations that had beaten the virus.

Coincidentally, the president of Rotary International that year, Jonathan Majiyagbe, was from Kano. He helped broker a compromise: Kano would use vaccine made in Indonesia, a Muslim country. In August 2004, Kano's governor publicly vaccinated his infant daughter.

Although the countries Kano infected will have to spend millions on emergency vaccination campaigns, they will probably be successful. The real challenge is to eliminate polio at its epicenter, Nigeria. If Kano does not bolt again, this will probably happen in a year. "We would not be here without Rotary International," Dr. Salah said. "Rotary is the heart and soul of polio eradication."

Wherever Grandpa is, I'm pretty sure he's smiling.

Posted by Jane Galt at May 14, 2005 10:33 AM | TrackBack | Technorati inbound links
Comments
Posted by: hey on May 14, 2005 11:51 AM

Service clubs do great things, and have to conquer immense evil to do it. Imagine bringing back a global pandemic solely to whip up your parishioners. This really is Tom Clancy's world (Rainbow 6 had an environmental nutjob group, including president's science advisor, create a pathogen to destroy humans except for a few "elect" who would bring the world back to a state of nature, which thes imams are doing in effect, if not with as much skill)

What about proffering charges against these mullahs for crimes against humanity? If i were part of the government in any of those 16 countries, parents of victims, or member of an ngo i would refer charges to the ICC.

Actually, given that I am a citizen of an ICC signatory, I think I might bring charges myself. Let's not let the leftists idiots simply try to destroy western civilisation with this, lets actually go after the barbs and nihilists that committ these obscene crimes.

Maybe we could get some group to bring charges against similar kinds of atrocities (I guess a rightwing feminist group, since the "Feminist" groups don't care about actually oppressed women these days) in terms of honor killings and tribal "justice" in pakistan, jordan, saudi arabia, sweden, britain, etc.

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