China Daily (Hong Kong)

Stern tests lie ahead for global teamwork

- By TAN XINYU in London tanxinyu@chinadaily.com.cn

The United States’ threat to permanentl­y cut funding to World Health Organizati­on, or WHO, and reconsider its membership of the global body is the latest in a series of US actions that has drawn criticism of the country’s handling of the pandemic. And some experts fear the longer-term damage to internatio­nal cooperatio­n may extend beyond viral outbreaks.

In a four-page letter to WHO Director-General, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, the US President Donald Trump accused the organizati­on of consistent­ly ignoring credible reports of the virus spreading in Wuhan in early December 2019 or even earlier, including reports from British medical journal The Lancet.

Responding to the letter, the medical journal said: “This statement is factually incorrect.” It added that The Lancet published no report in December 2019 referring to a virus or outbreak in Wuhan or anywhere else in China.

“The allegation­s leveled against WHO in President (Donald) Trump’s letter are serious and damaging to efforts to strengthen internatio­nal cooperatio­n to control this pandemic,” the journal said.

“It is essential that any review of the global response is based on a factually accurate account of what took place in December and January.”

In Brussels, the European Union has supported the WHO in the wake of the US’ renewed attacks.

“This is the time for solidarity. It is not the time for finger-pointing or underminin­g multilater­al cooperatio­n,” said a spokeswoma­n for the European Commission.

Back in April, the US has already announced that it will halt funding to the WHO.

The New York Times cited the attack on the WHO as the latest example of the president’s attempt to shift the blame throughout the crisis.

Over the past months, some US politician has repeatedly accused the news media, state governors, Democratic members of Congress and former president Barack Obama of being responsibl­e for the number of cases having at one point overwhelme­d the nation’s hospitals, the newspaper said.

‘Vital importance’

The Financial Times newspaper quoted Ronald Waldman, a public health professor at George Washington University who previously worked at the WHO, as saying the body was of “vital importance” to most countries and “should not be held responsibl­e for the course of the pandemic in the US”.

“The US citizenry may not immediatel­y suffer from a decision to withdraw funding from the organizati­on, but many people around the world who depend on WHO programs to develop and guide policies that protect their health and the health of their children will,” he said.

The CNN network said that US decision to withdraw funding from the WHO follows a pattern of skepticism of world organizati­ons that began well before the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Washington Post published an article on Thursday that was co-authored by G. John Ikenberry, the Albert G. Milbank professor of politics and internatio­nal affairs at Princeton University, and Charles A. Kupchan, a professor of internatio­nal affairs at Georgetown University and a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.

In the article, the academics said that whether the task is fighting disease, preventing war or battling climate change, the coronaviru­s should serve as an urgent wake-up call for a new era of internatio­nal teamwork.

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