The Telegram (St. John's)

WHO chief promises review of coronaviru­s response

China defends its performanc­e

-

GENEVA — The head of the World Health Organizati­on said on Monday an independen­t evaluation of the global coronaviru­s response would be launched as soon as possible, and China backed such a review.

Director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s made his promise during a virtual meeting of the WHO’S decision-making body, the World Health Assembly, at which Chinese President Xi Jinping defended his country’s own handling of the crisis.

U.S. President Donald Trump has fiercely questioned the WHO’S performanc­e during the pandemic and led internatio­nal criticism of China’s handling of the early stages of the crisis.

Tedros, who has always promised a post-pandemic review, said it would come “at the earliest appropriat­e moment” and provide recommenda­tions for future preparedne­ss.

“We all have lessons to learn from the pandemic. Every country and every organisati­on must examine its response and learn from its experience. WHO is committed to transparen­cy, accountabi­lity and continuous improvemen­t,” Tedros said.

The review must encompass responsibi­lity of “all actors in good faith,” he said.

“The risk remains high and we have a long road to travel,” Tedros added, saying preliminar­y tests in some countries showed that at most 20% of population­s had contracted the disease but most places that less than 10 per cent.

A resolution drafted by the European Union called for an independen­t evaluation of the WHO’S performanc­e and appeared to have won consensus backing among the health body’s 194 states.

China has previously opposed calls for a review of the origin and spread of the coronaviru­s, but Xi signalled Beijing would be amenable to an impartial evaluation of the global response once the pandemic is brought under control.

WILDLIFE ORIGINS

A draft of the EU resolution made no mention of China.

WHO and most experts say the virus is believed to have emerged in a market selling wildlife in the central city of Wuhan late last year. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said this month there is “a significan­t amount of evidence” the virus came from a laboratory in Wuhan, a charge China rejects.

A draft text of the EU resolution urges Tedros to initiate an “impartial, independen­t and comprehens­ive evaluation” of the response to COVID-19 under the WHO “at the earliest appropriat­e moment.”

Diplomats said the United States, which suspended its funding of the WHO during the crisis, was unlikely to block a consensus backing the resolution.

But it could “dissociate” itself from sections referring to intellectu­al property rights for drugs and vaccines, and to continued provision of services for sexual and reproducti­ve health during the pandemic, they said.

UN Secretary-gen. Antonio Guterres called the WHO “irreplacea­ble”. South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said Africa affirms its “full support”, but assistance to the continent should include debt relief and help with diagnostic­s, drugs and medical supplies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada