East Midlands MEP calls on residents to wear a purple crocus in support of Rotary’s End Polio Now campaign
24th February, 2014Emma McClarkin MEP, the Conservative Member of the European Parliament for the East Midlands, is this week urging people across the region to support Rotary’s End Polio Now campaign by wearing a purple fabric crocus purchased from them.
Miss McClarkin spoke after purchasing a crocus herself, and Rotary are hoping that the flower will become a symbol for fighting against polio. The Crocus was chosen as the purple colour matched the dye painted on the fingers of children who have been immunised.
Her support for the campaign comes at an important time in the fight to eradicate polio, which would be only the second human disease to be eradicated. Case numbers of the disease have never been lower, and only three countries (Nigeria, Afghanistan and Pakistan) have never stopped transmission of the wild poliovirus.
However, a funding gap means immunization campaigns are being cut in high-risk countries, leaving children more vulnerable to polio. If polio isn’t stopped now, the disease could stage a comeback, affecting an estimated 200,000 children every year.
Rotary, a humanitarian service organization with nearly 34,000 clubs in more than 200 countries and geographical areas, made polio eradication its top priority in 1985. Rotary has since contributed US$1.2 billion, and its members have logged countless volunteer hours to help immunize more than two billion children in 122 countries.
Overall, remarkable progress has been achieved in the fight against polio. Since 1988, the number of polio cases has been reduced from 350,000 a year to fewer than 700 cases in 2011. The Americas were declared free from polio in 1994, the Western Pacific region in 2000, and Europe in 2002.
A highly infectious disease, polio still strikes children mainly under the age of five in parts of Africa and South Asia. Polio can cause paralysis and sometimes death. There is no cure for polio, but for as little as 50 pence worth of oral vaccine, a child can be protected from the disease for life.
Miss McClarkin said:
“I am wholeheartedly supporting the Rotary’s End Polio now campaign. It is achievable to see the eradication of this disease and I commend Rotaries all across the East Midlands for supporting this campaign.
“I hope people across the East Midlands will support them, and wear their purple Crocus with pride!”
For further information, visit www.endpolionow.org, www.rotarycrocus.com/, or like their campaign on facebook at facebook.com/rotarycrocus