New Era

China to offer $3b to developing countries for COVID-19 response: Xi at Global Health Summit

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China will provide an additional $3 billion in internatio­nal aid over the next three years to support COVID-19 response and economic and social recovery in other developing countries, Chinese President Xi Jinping said on Friday.

Xi made the remarks during a speech at the Global Health Summit via video link from Beijing.

The summit was a special event in Rome and organized by Italy, the G20 Presidency of 2021, and the European Commission.

Xi said China has already supplied 300 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines to the world and will provide more, and China is fully implementi­ng the G20 Debt Service Suspension Initiative for Poorest Countries and has so far put off debt repayments exceeding $1.3 billion, the highest deferral among G20 members.

China has provided $2 billion in assistance for the COVID-19 response and economic and social recovery in developing countries, and have sent medical supplies to more than 150 countries and 13 internatio­nal organizati­ons, providing more than 280 billion masks, 3.4 billion protective suits and 4 billion testing kits to the world, Xi said.

China supports its vaccine companies in transferri­ng technologi­es to other developing countries and carrying out joint production with them, Xi said.

In his speech, Xi urged

G20 members to shoulder responsibi­lities in global cooperatio­n against the virus, and he made five proposals.

We must tide over this trying time through solidarity and cooperatio­n, and firmly reject any attempt to politicize, label or stigmatize the virus, he said.

Transferri­ng technologi­es by vaccine companies to other developing countries or technology cooperatio­n advocated by China is much more crucial than the US’ empty talk of waiving intellectu­al property rights, Lü Xiang, a research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times on Friday.

US President Joe Biden did not attend the summit, with Vice President Kamala Harris representi­ng the US.

Having intellectu­al property does not necessaril­y mean a country has the capability

to produce vaccines, and cooperatio­n in technologi­es, materials and personnel is more important, which enables such capability, Lü said.

Xi captured the real focal point of global vaccine cooperatio­n. It will help other developing countries that lack the conditions to produce vaccines themselves, and it shows China’s accountabi­lity as the most populous country and world’s second largest economy, he said.

By putting off debt repayments for developing countries, China understand­s the pain other developing countries are going through.

So putting off debt repayments may be just the beginning. China will do more for developing countries in the future, much more than developed nations that only pay lip service, Lü said. Zhuang Shilihe,

a Guangzhou-based

immunologi­st closely studying COVID-19 vaccines, told the Global Times that China may also donate more vaccines through COVAX after the WHO grants emergency approval to China’s Sinovac vaccine, which the WHO is likely to announce in a few days.

Leaders of the world’s 20 largest economies discussing the joint response to the gravest global public health crisis in a century highlighte­d the significan­ce of multilater­alism and unity in the global COVID-19 battle, Chinese observers said.

Observers urged G20 members to reject divisive political maneuverin­g during cooperatio­n.

“As long as there is a crisis, countries like the US are so used to utilizing it to attack its rivals, provoking a political warfare. It is their tradition to play dirty and they will hardly stop doing so. That’s why we must raise our voice against it,” Lü said.

LOCALIZED VACCINE PRODUCTION

The summit approved a document, called the Declaratio­n of Rome. Reuters reported the joint declaratio­n showed that the summit would call for voluntary licensing and technology transfers to boost vaccine production.

A similar mechanism has been used in Africa to improve the supply of AIDS medicines.

Chinese observers said voluntary licensing was far from enough to help developing countries, especially those in Africa, to get a vaccine. Of the 1.4 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccine administer­ed to date, only 24 million doses - less than 2 percent - have reached Africa, according to the UN.

Localized production was the most efficient way for developing countries with large population­s to acquire vaccines, Lü said, urging big powers such as the US to immediatel­y lift its embargo on ingredient exports and offer transport, store equipment, technology and technician­s to help developing countries produce vaccines.

“Joe Biden, please don’t just pay lip service, get it done,” Lü said. China has been supplying vaccines to nearly 40 African countries, and China is the largest supplier of vaccines to Africa, according to the Chinese Foreign Ministry.

China has also helped African countries with localized production.

Egypt started producing China’s Sinovac COVID-19 vaccine recently, becoming the first country in Africa with COVID-19 vaccine production capacity. Egypt will produce 40 million doses of Sinovac’s vaccine in the first year.

Jiang Chunlai, a professor at Jilin University’s School of Life Sciences, told the Global Times that for some African countries with low production capacity or low biosafety conditions, internatio­nal organizati­ons, NGOs and charity groups should step in to purchase WHO-approved vaccines and transport them to those countries.

 ?? Photo:Xinhua ?? Chinese President Xi Jinping attends the Global Health Summit and delivers a speech via video in Beijing, capital of China, May 21, 2021.
Photo:Xinhua Chinese President Xi Jinping attends the Global Health Summit and delivers a speech via video in Beijing, capital of China, May 21, 2021.
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