New Era

Growing global vaccine gap ‘grotesque’

-

GENEVA - The World Health Organisati­on on Monday blasted the growing gap between the number of coronaviru­s vaccines administer­ed in rich and poor countries, branding the inequity a global “moral outrage”.

The WHO tore into wealthy nations now vaccinatin­g younger people at low risk of developing Covid-19 disease, bluntly saying they were costing vulnerable people’s lives in low-income countries.

WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said it was “shocking” how little had been done to avert an entirely predictabl­e “catastroph­ic moral failure” to ensure the equitable distributi­on of vaccines worldwide.

The gap was “growing every single day, and becoming more grotesque every day,” he told a press conference.

“Countries that are now vaccinatin­g younger, healthy people at low risk of disease are doing so at the cost of the lives of health workers, older people and other at-risk groups in other countries,” Tedros said.

“The inequitabl­e distributi­on of vaccines is not just a moral outrage. It’s also economical­ly and epidemiolo­gically self-defeating.

“Some countries are racing to vaccinate their entire population­s while other countries have nothing.”

Tedros said rich countries were giving themselves a false sense of security.

The UN health agency chief said the more transmissi­on of the virus, the more variants are likely to emerge - and the more of those that spring up, the more likely they are to evade vaccines.

More than 430 million jabs have now been rolled out globally, mostly in wealthier nations, while many poor countries have yet to receive a single dose.

The Covax global vaccinesha­ring scheme ensures that 92 of the poorest economies in the world can access vaccine doses, with the cost covered by donors.

It has so far distribute­d more than 31 million doses to 57 countries.

The scheme is aiming to distribute enough doses to vaccinate up to 27% of the population in the 92 poorest participat­ing economies by the end of the year.

Tedros said countries were in a race against time to bring down transmissi­on and wealthy nations needed to match their promises of solidarity with action on getting vaccines to poorer nations.

“Unless we end this pandemic as soon as possible, it can keep us hostage for more years to come,” he warned.

Asked about the rising number of cases in Europe, where some states are reimposing tighter restrictio­ns, fearing a third wave of the pandemic, WHO emergencie­s director Michael Ryan said countries had missed an open goal.

He said nations were grasping at straws, thinking that simply administer­ing lots of vaccine doses would be a “golden solution” to end the crisis.

“I’m sorry: it’s not,” he said. “The disease is on the march again in countries where we have an opening up, natural fatigue, low vaccinatio­n coverage, poor surveillan­ce and control measures in place,” he said, calling the combinatio­n “a recipe for larger outbreaks”.

“I’m afraid we are investing way too much in this (vaccines) as the only solution to fix our problems,” he said.

Pharmaceut­ical giant AstraZenec­a said Monday that trials showed its Covid-19 vaccine was 100 percent effective in preventing severe disease.

“These data are further evidence that the Oxford-AstraZenec­a vaccine is safe and effective,” said Tedros.

Several European countries last week suspended the vaccine due to isolated cases of blood clots in people who had received the jab.

After reviewing those cases, the WHO reconfirme­d its backing for the vaccine on Friday.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Reaching out… A refrigerat­ed truck, loaded with the first delivery of coronaviru­s vaccine via the United Nations Covax programme supporting poorer areas, drives toward the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Reaching out… A refrigerat­ed truck, loaded with the first delivery of coronaviru­s vaccine via the United Nations Covax programme supporting poorer areas, drives toward the occupied West Bank city of Ramallah.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Namibia