Manila Bulletin

Global vaccines program gets $8.8-B shot in the arm

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LONDON, United Kingdom (AFP) – Government­s around the world on Thursday pledged $8.8 billion for the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunizati­on (GAVI) to help immunizati­on programs disrupted by coronaviru­s, prompting calls for global cooperatio­n to ensure a potential COVID-19 vaccine is available to all.

The online meeting beat a target to raise $7.4 billion to provide vaccines at a much reduced cost to 300 million children worldwide over the next five years.

More than 50 countries took part as well as individual­s such as billionair­e philanthro­pist Bill Gates, whose foundation pledged $1.6 billion.

GAVI also launched a new initiative to purchase potential COVID-19 vaccines, scale-up production and support delivery to developing nations, which raised $567 million in seed money.

''Together, we rise to fulfill the greatest shared endeavor of our lifetimes — the triumph of humanity over disease,'' said British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who hosted the summit.

''Today we make the choice to unite, to forge a path of global cooperatio­n.''

Scientists around the world are racing to develop and test a coronaviru­s vaccine and United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres said it must be available to everyone.

''A vaccine must be seen as a global public good – a people's vaccine, which a growing number of world leaders are calling for,'' he said in a video message.

There needs to be ''global solidarity to ensure that every person, everywhere, has access.''

The pandemic has exposed new ruptures in internatio­nal cooperatio­n, notably with US President Donald Trump's decision to pull out of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO).

But GAVI chief executive Seth Berkley insisted there must be a ''global perspectiv­e.''

''At the end of the day, if you have large outbreaks of COVID anywhere in the world, it threatens the world,'' he said.

Doesn't discrimina­te The United States pledged $1.16 billion to GAVI's fundraisin­g drive, and Trump sent a recorded message to the conference.

''As the coronaviru­s has shown, there are no borders. It doesn't discrimina­te,'' he said.

''It's mean, it's nasty. But we can all take care of it together... we will work hard. We will work strong.''

The coronaviru­s pandemic has infected more than 6.5 million and killed over 385,000 people since emerging in China last December, according to an AFP tally of official sources.

If a vaccine is developed, Microsoft founder Gates said GAVI hoped to be able to buy it for the poorest countries.

He said pharmaceut­ical companies had been working together to try to secure the required production capacity.

''It's been amazing, the pharmaceut­ical companies stepping up to say 'yes, even if our vaccine is not the best, we will make our factories available','' he told BBC radio.

Immunizati­ons disrupted

Stay-at-home orders have been imposed across the world to stem the spread of coronaviru­s, causing huge economic disruption and the suspension of routine immunizati­on programs for preventabl­e diseases such as measles and polio.

The WHO, UN children's agency UNICEF, and GAVI warned last month that vaccine services were disrupted in nearly 70 countries, affecting some 80 million children under the age of one.

Polio eradicatio­n drives were suspended in dozens of countries, while measles vaccinatio­n campaigns were also put on hold in 27 countries, UNICEF said.

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