WHO Member States have reaffirmed their collective commitment to finishing polio eradication, following extensive discussions at this week’s WHO Executive Board. Coming after the global pledging moment hosted in Abu Dhabi in December 2025, the deliberations sent a clear signal: the world remains united behind the goal of a polio-free future.
Opening the EB, WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said: “Vaccines are bringing us closer to the eradication of polio, with 41 cases of wild polio reported last year from just 24 districts in Pakistan and Afghanistan, down from 99 cases in 49 districts in 2024.”
During the Board’s consideration of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) report, ministers and delegates welcomed the continued progress toward interrupting the last remaining chains of wild poliovirus transmission in Pakistan and Afghanistan, while underscoring the importance of sustaining momentum to stop outbreaks of circulating variant polioviruses worldwide.
Dr Razia Pendse, Chef de Cabinet, WHO, thanked Member States for their leadership and support: “After more than three decades, polio eradication is within reach. The past year has reinforced that polio eradication is not only a technical challenge — it is a geopolitical one. The outbreak response in Gaza demonstrated this clearly. I would like to thank Member States for their engagement in bringing the world to the threshold of being polio-free. We know what works. We have the tools. And with your continued leadership, we can ensure that polio becomes only the second human disease in history to be eradicated — forever.”