New Era

Heads of global organisati­ons issue joint call for vaccine equality

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WASHINGTON - World leaders must make a “new commitment” to a more equal distributi­on of coronaviru­s vaccines to bring the pandemic under control, the heads of four major global organisati­ons said yesterday.

Their joint rallying cry comes as concerns rise that vaccine inequality between wealthy and poor nations is further complicati­ng and prolonging a pandemic that has killed more than 3.5 million people globally.

Writing in the Washington Post on Tuesday, the heads of the World Health Organisati­on, World Bank, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and World Trade Organisati­on blamed the gap in vaccinatio­n programmes for the emergence of virus variants that have fuelled fresh outbreaks in the developing world.

“It has become abundantly clear that there will be no broad-based recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic without an end to the health crisis. Access to vaccinatio­n is key to both,” they said.

“Ending the pandemic is possible - and requires global action now.”

The joint op-ed was penned by IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva, WHO director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, World Bank president David Malpas, and WTO director general Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.

They called on the Group of Seven wealthy democracie­s to agree on a “stepped-up coordinate­d strategy, backed by new financing, to vaccinate the world” at their next meeting in the United Kingdom later this month.

The officials recommende­d the G7 agrees to fund a $50 billion plan already put forward by the IMF to accelerate the end of the pandemic.

The WHO had already decried vaccine inequality as “grotesque” in March and its chief Tedros last month asked vaccine-wealthy nations to refrain from giving shots to children and adolescent­s and instead donate those doses to other nations.

UN-backed program Covax is meant to share vaccines with the poorest nations.

But wealthy countries effectivel­y elbowed out Covax in the early stages of procuremen­t, striking their own deals with drug manufactur­ers and taking the overwhelmi­ng share of the more than 1.8 billion doses of vaccine that have already been injected worldwide.

The G7 member countries, which met in central London under tight coronaviru­s restrictio­ns last month, committed to financiall­y support Covax.

But there was no immediate announceme­nt on fresh funding to improve access to vaccines, despite repeated calls for the group to do more to help poorer countries.

 ??  ?? Equal distributi­on… A joint op-ed by IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva, WHO director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, World Bank president David Malpas, and WTO director general Ngozi OkonjoIwea­la called for a new commitment to a more equal distributi­on of coronaviru­s vaccines to bring the pandemic under control.
Equal distributi­on… A joint op-ed by IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva, WHO director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, World Bank president David Malpas, and WTO director general Ngozi OkonjoIwea­la called for a new commitment to a more equal distributi­on of coronaviru­s vaccines to bring the pandemic under control.

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