October-November 2022 | Regulars

Ian Riseley – Foundation Trustee Chair’s Column

Ian Riseley – Foundation Trustee Chair’s Column

Rotary Foundation Trustee Chair, Ian Riseley looks back to his Rotary hero, a past Rotary President and the success Rotary has had with eradicating polio before the sudden return and how the new increase in cases is being dealt with.

Who are your Rotary heroes? One of mine was Clem Renouf, the 1978-79 Rotary International president.

I related to Sir Clem, who died in 2020, in many ways. We shared the same profession and Australian nationality and a passion for polio eradication.

It was Clem’s leadership that first put us on track to embrace the cause, mobilising what is today a global partnership that has led us to the cusp of eradicating a human disease for only the second time in history.

Rotary is as active as ever. We are calling on every member to take action and be part of this historic fight.”

What Rotary and its partners have achieved is nothing short of remarkable.

We have helped reduce polio cases by 99.9% worldwide, immunising more than two billion children in 122 countries.

Last year alone, more than 370 million children were vaccinated in 30 countries using more than one billion doses of oral polio vaccine.

As a result, we are seeing near historic lows in the number of cases. In August 2020, the WHO African region was certified free of wild poliovirus, an incredible achievement for Rotary members and a huge step on the road to eradication.

But remember that while polio exists anywhere, it is a threat to people everywhere, especially to young children. You may have heard about importations of the disease to Malawi and Mozambique, detection of poliovirus in sewage in the United Kingdom, and a recent case in the United States.

To stay agile, Rotary and its partners are deploying a new polio vaccine, novel oral polio vaccine type 2 (nOPV2), to fight outbreaks of circulating vaccine-derived poliovirus, also known as variant poliovirus, which continues to threaten children in Africa, as well as several countries in Asia and the Middle East, including in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Rotary is as active as ever. We are calling on every member to take action and be part of this historic fight.

What Rotary and its partners have achieved is nothing short of remarkable.”

Take the fight to your clubs and communities on World Polio Day, 24 October.

Don’t forget that contributions towards the goal of $50 million per year for polio eradication will be matched 2-to-1 by our generous partner, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Like Sir Clem, we can all be Rotary heroes, each playing a part in our organisation’s great legacy.

Through our giving, raising awareness and funds, and hands-on service, each of us brings Rotary a step closer to fulfilling our promise to the children of the world by eradicating polio for good.

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