Fiji Sun

Solidarity in Fighting Pandemic Remains Best Way to Remember 4M Lives Lost to COVID-19

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The world passed the “tragic milestone” of 4 million recorded COVID-19 fatalities last Wednesday, the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) said, adding that the pandemic’s true toll was probably higher.

“From a moral, epidemiolo­gical or economic point view, now is the time for the world to come together to tackle this pandemic collective­ly,” said WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s.

The global fight against the pandemic is far from over. Due to a dramatic inequity in vaccine coverage, some underdevel­oped regions in Africa and South Asia have already missed the best opportunit­y to put the pandemic under control.

Delta and Lambda variants

The fast-moving virus variants such as Delta and Lambda have led to an alarming spike in cases and deaths worldwide, including in countries that previously had better control.

The world’s slow progress in curbing the pandemic cannot be attributed to virus variants alone.

“Vaccine nationalis­m, where a handful of nations have taken the lion’s share, is morally indefensib­le,” Dr Tedros said.

Some rich nations in the West not only hoard far more doses than their citizens need and refuse to share their vaccines with developing countries, but also exclude vaccines developed by some developing countries from major internatio­nal vaccine supply channels, further worsening vaccine shortages.

The Washington Post previously estimated that the United States has bought enough coronaviru­s vaccines to vaccinate 750 million people, well over the threshold needed to fully immunise the 260 million adults in the country.

Meanwhile, many countries are still struggling to get a single dose. Data released by the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention showed that as of June 10, only about 0.6 per cent of Africa’s population had been vaccinated.

UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres has repeatedly blasted vaccine nationalis­m and urged to make doses available, affordable and accessible to all.

“If the virus is allowed to spread like wildfire in the Global South, or parts of it, it will mutate again and again,” he warned.

In the grim fight against the coronaviru­s, the world must come together, reject politicisa­tion and work together to build a global community of health for all.

At this critical moment, it is all the more important for major countries to set an example and share more vaccines and other public goods with other countries.

China has played a part in helping close the vaccinatio­n gap. It has supplied more than 480 million doses to the internatio­nal community, provided vaccine assistance to nearly 100 countries, and exported vaccines to more than 50 countries.

China is world’s largest vaccine supplier

China is the world’s largest vaccine supplier, and has decided to provide vaccines to UN peacekeepi­ng operations and the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, and will continue to take actions to support COVAX, the global vaccine sharing scheme.

No global problem can be solved by any one country alone. Only by working together can humankind finally defeat the pandemic.

The best way for the world to remember the four million people who have died from the coronaviru­s is to re-commit to the principle of human solidarity and cooperatio­n in battling the raging pandemic.

 ?? Dita Alangkara ?? Men pray during the burial of a relative at Rorotan Cemetery which is reserved for those who died of COVID-19 Delta variant, in Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 1, 2021. New land around the capital city continues to be cleared for the dead and gravedigge­rs have to work late shifts following surges in COVID-19 cases. Photo:
Dita Alangkara Men pray during the burial of a relative at Rorotan Cemetery which is reserved for those who died of COVID-19 Delta variant, in Jakarta, Indonesia, on July 1, 2021. New land around the capital city continues to be cleared for the dead and gravedigge­rs have to work late shifts following surges in COVID-19 cases. Photo:

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