Toronto Star

Share vaccines equitably, in solidarity, around world

- OBIORA CHINEDU OKAFOR CONTRIBUTO­R Obiora Chinedu Okafor is the UN independen­t expert on human rights and internatio­nal solidarity and the York Research Chair in internatio­nal and transnatio­nal legal studies at the Osgoode Hall Law School.

The last weeks of 2020 witnessed the historic approval of three COVID- 19 vaccines by regulators in various countries, offering hope to billions worldwide. Several states, mostly in the Global North, have already secured large quantities of the approved vaccines and commenced vaccinatin­g their population­s.

Unfortunat­ely, this has not been the case in almost all of the Global South states, in which close to 90 per cent of the world’s population lives. Thus, the world currently faces a sharp and highly problemati­c vaccine divide in which the much richer Global North states, which host a very small percentage of the global population, have so far cornered the vast majority of available COVID- 19 vaccines, leaving the bulk of the world’s population with almost no access.

Rich states have acted according to their perceived national self- interest, and under political pressure from their own population­s to rapidly end the pandemic for them. They imagine that the pandemic will end once their population­s receive the vaccine, regardless of whether the same experience is simultaneo­usly replicated in the poorer states.

And yet, as a top diplomat observed, this pandemic will not end for anyone, until it ends for everyone. As Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. once taught the world in his “Letter from a Birmingham Jail,” “we are tied together in the single garment of destiny, caught in an inescapabl­e network of mutuality.”

Given the continuati­on of both crossborde­r trade and significan­t human traffic around the globe, the virus can still travel from the vastly unvaccinat­ed massive population of the Global South to the Global North, including in its increasing­ly mutating forms. This would likely bolster or reignite the pandemic, even in states that have vaccinated large swathes of their population­s, or otherwise complicate or delay the effort to end it.

In the light of this realizatio­n, globally co- ordinated vaccine distributi­on programs are highly preferable to the individual­ized approaches adopted by alltoomany of the richer states. Internatio­nal vaccine solidarity should be much preferred over internatio­nal vaccine competitio­n.

Thus, I strongly commend the COVID19 Vaccine Global Access Facility ( COVAX) led by the World Health Organizati­on. COVAX aims at the global equitable access to COVID- 19 vaccines by fairly distributi­ng two billion doses by the end of 2021.

Aiming to mitigate the negative effects of vaccine hoarding by the richer states, COVAX member- states have agreed to not “receive enough doses to vaccinate more than 20 per cent of its population until all countries in the financing group have been offered this amount” and to only “request for enough doses to vaccinate between 10- 50 per cent of their population” with the exception of “those countries who have opted to receive fewer than 20 per cent.”

I therefore urge that all states, rather than act separately to hoard vaccines, rededicate themselves to COVAX. While many rich states have commendabl­y contribute­d large sums of money to COVAX, they undermine its effectiven­ess, and the overall effort to end the pandemic as rapidly as possible for everyone, when they simultaneo­usly engage in vaccine hoarding.

Since vastly increasing the quantities of manufactur­ed vaccine doses is another factor that will contribute to their more even distributi­on around the world, any measure that can ensure this outcome deserves serious considerat­ion.

Such a vast increase in the availabili­ty of doses can only be brought about in the shortest possible time by the production of generic versions of vaccines by as many companies as possible, without them being unduly constraine­d by patents. I therefore urge all states to support the applicatio­n made by South Africa and India to the World Trade Organizati­on for a waiver that would make this possible.

Given the great urgency of ensuring for everyone, everywhere, as rapid and effective access to COVID- 19 vaccines as possible, I urge urgent and strong action by states and other actors toward a course correction.

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