Stabroek News

Mexico frets over WHO vaccine rules

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CITY, (Reuters) Mexico's president yesterday hailed a U.S. decision to open their shared border in November after more than 18 months of pandemic restrictio­ns, though millions of Mexicans inoculated with Chinese and Russian vaccines face being shut out.

The world's busiest land border, where nearly a million people crossed each day before the coronaviru­s pandemic broke out, has been closed to non-essential travel since March 2020.

"The opening of the northern border has been achieved, we are going to have normality," President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador told his daily morning news conference.

Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard added the United States would determine the exact date, but that it would be in early November.

With the United States planning to permit entry only to visitors inoculated with vaccines authorized by the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), Lopez Obrador urged WHO to approve all other COVID-19 vaccines

in public use.

"The WHO must act correctly, without political or ideologica­l tendencies, sticking to the science," Lopez Obrador said, in reference to slower certificat­ion for Russian and some Chinese vaccines.

The closure of the 1,954-mile (3,144-km) border dealt a blow to businesses on both side of the frontier. In Texas border counties alone, the loss of Mexican shoppers and visitors caused around $4.9 billion in lost GDP in 2020, a report by the Baker Institute calculated.

More than 950,000 people entered the United States from Mexico on foot or in cars on a typical day, according to 2019 U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agency data. U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas earlier said U.S. borders with Canada and Mexico would reopen in November for fully vaccinated travelers. U.S. officials last week said internatio­nal visitors will need to be inoculated with U.S. or WHO-authorized vaccines.

This poses a problem for Mexico, which has inoculated millions of people with Russia's Sputnik V and China's Cansino - neither of which is WHO-approved.

Mexico has signed agreements for Sputnik to inoculate another 12 million people, and Cansino, another 35 million people, according to the foreign ministry.

 ?? ?? Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador
Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador

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