Abu Dhabi Summit: Donors Pledge $1.9bn For Pakistan Polio Eradication

1 min read

ABU DHABI: Pakistan has emerged as a central focus of a global polio funding drive after international donors pledged $1.9 billion in Abu Dhabi to accelerate eradication efforts, with Pakistan remaining one of only two countries where the virus is still endemic.

Pakistan committed $154 million to strengthen nationwide vaccination campaigns, surveillance, and emergency response. Pakistan’s Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal represented the country at the event, which was also attended by Bill Gates, World Health Organisation Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, and members of the UAE leadership, including Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and Sheikha Mariam bint Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan.

Pakistan Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal said the country was intensifying door-to-door immunisation drives, especially in high-risk districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Balochistan, and Karachi.

Major international pledges included $1.2 billion from the Gates Foundation, $140 million from the Mohamed bin Zayed Foundation for Humanity, $450 million from Rotary International, $100 million from Bloomberg Philanthropies, $62 million from Germany, $46 million from the United States, $6 million from Japan, $4 million from the Islamic Food & Nutrition Council of America (IFANCA), and $3 million from Luxembourg, along with contributions from other partner countries.

Health officials said the new funding will help Pakistan recruit and train more frontline vaccinators, improve cold-chain systems, and expand monitoring of mobile and cross-border populations, particularly along the Pakistan-Afghanistan frontier.

Although global polio cases have dropped by more than 99 percent, Pakistan and Afghanistan reported new infections this year, underlining the need for sustained international and domestic support. Authorities said Pakistan’s success is now considered crucial to achieving global eradication, with officials warning that failure to eliminate the virus locally would continue to pose a risk worldwide.

Polio once paralysed about 1,000 children every day in more than 125 countries. If eliminated, it would become only the second human disease ever eradicated after smallpox and could save the world more than $33 billion by the year 2100.

Published in The NEWS on December 9, 2025. 

Previous Story

Sindh Assembly Resolution Calls for Fixing 18 Years as Minimum Legal Age for Marriage across Pakistan

Next Story

School Teacher, Son Shot Dead in Kalat

Latest from Blog

Risky Experiment

The SBP’s recent decision to allow teenagers as young as 13 to open and operate bank accounts entirely on their own is meant to create an opportunity for children to gain financial literacy early and through hands-on experience. The new child account category is a fully functional digital wallet with…

Premature Babies Face Rising Risk of Preventable Blindness: Report

RAWALPINDI: Premature babies in Pakistan are losing their sight at rates far above global averages as a treatable eye condition, retinopathy of prematurity (ROP), continues to go undetected across large parts of the country, according to data compiled by Al-Shifa Trust Eye Hospital. The Al-Shifa Trust report stated that ROP…

Chaos Persists as Schools, Students Struggle to Secure Matric Admit Cards in Karachi

KARACHI: A day after the Board of Secondary Education Karachi (BSEK) postponed the matriculation exams for three days, the administrations of hundreds of schools, mostly privately run, are still scrambling to obtain admit cards for their thousands of students so they can learn about their examination centres. The matriculation exams, originally scheduled…

Death Toll Rises to 11 in Balochistan as Rain Lashes Much of Country

• Five of the victims die in Qila Abdullah, Kakar Khurasan • Flooding in Kabul River, urban centres likely • Widespread rain forecast across Punjab QUETTA / PESHAWAR / LAHORE: The death toll in rain-related incid­e­nts has reached 11, while over a do­­z­e­­n people have been injured in diff­e­­rent areas of Balochistan,…

Mpox Cases Rise in Sindh, Other Provinces

ISLAMABAD: A joint investigation into a suspected Mpox outbreak in Sindh’s Khairpur district has been launched by a high-level team of epidemiologists, laboratory scientists, and infection prevention experts. This comes as federal authorities express concern provincial government remains in denial despite laboratory confirmations and a growing number of cases among…
Go toTop