The Province

No one is safe until everyone is safe

- LLOYD AXWORTHY AND BARBARA GRANTHAM Lloyd Axworthy is chair of the World Refugee & Migration Council and former Canadian minister of foreign affairs. Barbara Grantham is president and CEO of CARE Canada. She has more than 30 years' experience as a senior

The devastatin­g situation in India is our newest reminder that we need global co-operation to defeat COVID-19.

Despite producing most of the world's COVID-19 vaccines, India is facing a crushing third wave; the threat of additional variants looms. The scope of this surge is emerging as a global humanitari­an crisis.

The humanitari­an community has been sounding the alarm on vaccine equity for months. Humanitari­an crises were on the rise before the pandemic, diverting resources from other long-term initiative­s.

Now the United Nations estimates that 235 million people in the world's most fragile humanitari­an settings across 56 countries are at risk of being overlooked by government-led vaccinatio­n activities.

What's worse, feedback from refugee women reveals a deeper, more insidious problem: It's not that they are at the back of the queue; they are not in the queue at all.

And while small numbers of vaccines may make it to fragile settings, these vaccines are useless without effective delivery systems, particular­ly the front-line personnel who keep us safe as they administer vaccines.

More than 70 per cent of the world's front-line health workers are women, risking their lives to get vaccines, services and supplies to the world's most underserve­d and at-risk communitie­s. Often underpaid or working in unsafe conditions, they aren't getting access to vaccines, either. The World Health Organizati­on estimates that 30 million people are at risk and are not included in any government vaccinatio­n plans. Many of them are community health workers. Most of them are women.

CARE estimates that for every $1 a country or donor government invests in vaccine doses, a further $5 must be invested to deliver the vaccine — to pay front-line healthcare workers, formal and informal, and to provide the equipment, training and compensati­on they need to keep themselves, their families and their communitie­s safe. Vaccine readiness requires training of front-line health workers, the majority of whom are women. This is in line with Canada's commitment to Feminist Internatio­nal Assistance and the ministeria­l mandate letter commitment to support and protect the rights of paid and unpaid care workers. Canada can play a leadership role in supporting the training and equip front-line health-care workers, as part of vaccine readiness efforts.

While some world leaders have made bold commitment­s to the equitable distributi­on of vaccines, high-income countries have bought nearly four times what they need. As of April 2021, low-income countries have received only 0.2 per cent of the global vaccine supply. Canada reserved more than four times the number of vaccines needed to vaccinate our own population.

Not only have high-income countries dominated vaccine demand, they have also fallen short on funding for COVAX, the global mechanism for equitable procuremen­t and distributi­on of COVID-19 vaccines. COVAX stipulates free or reduced costs for low- and middle-income countries. But as of March 2021, only $8.5 billion had been committed; $11.1 billion is needed for all countries to vaccinate at least 20 per cent of their population­s in 2021. Canada must ensure that our own funding commitment­s don't fall short. We can also sign on to the proposal by India and South Africa, supported by nearly 100 countries, to temporaril­y suspend intellectu­al property rights so that COVID-19 vaccines are accessible for poor countries.

As with many rights and freedoms, equitable access to COVID19 vaccines is proving to be an unrealized right, with discrimina­tion and privilege as causal factors. Worldwide, the benefit of a few outweighs the widespread benefits for many and in particular, the health and economic well-being of the women and people of colour on the front lines of this crisis.

Ensuring the equitable distributi­on of vaccines is the smart thing to do. The longer that the virus spreads and mutates in non-vaccinated population­s, the more likely we are to see the emergence of more virulent, more contagious and potentiall­y vaccine-resistance strains. No one is safe until everyone is safe.

More importantl­y, it is the right thing to do.

Globally, we can save twice as many lives if vaccines are distribute­d equitably across nations, instead of hoarded by richer countries. Considered and equitable distributi­on of vaccines today will not only save lives as we face COVID19, it will also drive the confidence and trust in global institutio­ns needed to build a more equal future for us all.

Co-operation in our own communitie­s and cities has been key to protecting ourselves against COVID-19. But global co-operation and equitable distributi­on will be the only way we put this pandemic behind us.

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