The Manila Times

World leaders given treaty jolt on Covid anniversar­y

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GENEVA: Wavering world leaders were told on Tuesday to speed up efforts to agree a global treaty on avoiding a new pandemic catastroph­e, four years to the day since the coronaviru­s was declared an internatio­nal emergency.

Countries have spent more than two years working out an accord on making sure countries are better prepared to deal with, or head off, the next pandemic.

The 194 World Health Organizati­on (WHO) member-states wanted a treaty finalized by May this year when they started negotiatio­ns in December 2021, when Covid-19 deaths numbered in the millions and health systems had been crippled.

But the momentum has sagged, time is running out, and countries are still at loggerhead­s.

The WHO executive board heard last week that European countries want more money invested in pandemic prevention, while Africa wants the knowledge and financing to make it work, including greater access to vaccines and treatments.

The Independen­t Panel for Pandemic Preparedne­ss and Response, headed by New Zealand’s former prime minister Helen Clark and Liberian ex-president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, recommende­d creating a new pandemic treaty in May 2021.

Clark, Sirleaf and a host of other former heads of state released a letter on Tuesday calling for greater action.

“There are worrying signs of stalemate on several issues which go to the heart of a transforma­tive and equitable internatio­nal system for pandemic preparedne­ss and response,” the signatorie­s said.

“A new pandemic threat is inevitable. A new pandemic is not — if we act now,” they warned.

With only two fortnight-long sessions of talks planned before the deadline, the signatorie­s urged world leaders to seal “an effective, legally binding pandemic accord.”

‘Worrying signs of stalemate’

The new treaty must guarantee that all countries “have the capacity to detect, alert, and contain pandemic threats, and the tools and means required to protect people’s health and economic and social wellbeing,” they said.

The original plan was for the agreement to be sealed at the 2024 World Health Assembly of member-states, the WHO’s decision-making body, which convenes from May 27 to June 1.

Besides regional wrangling, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said last week that momentum had been slowed by entrenched positions and “a torrent of fake news, lies and conspiracy theories.”

The letter signatorie­s said the accord must be balanced, with all regions having guaranteed rapid access to pandemic-fighting tools, rather than charity filling the gaps, or private companies calling the shots.

“Every region must have the capacities to research, develop, manufactur­e, and distribute lifesaving tools like vaccines, tests, and treatments,” they said.

“Second, the accord must commit to a pathway to sustained financing for pandemic preparedne­ss and response,” they added.

Finally, the agreement must ensure countries are held to account for their commitment­s.

“Without such assurance, a new pathogen simply has license to spread,” they said, recommendi­ng an independen­t monitoring system along the lines of other existing treaties.

Grim anniversar­y

Signatorie­s included former UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon, former WHO chief Gro Harlem Brundtland and former UN aid chief Mark Lowcock.

Former presidents among the signatorie­s were Ernesto Zedillo of Mexico, Mary Robinson of Ireland, Laura Chinchilla Miranda of Costa Rica and Kolinda GrabarKita­rovic of Croatia.

Former British foreign secretary David Miliband and former Argentinia­n foreign minister Susana Malcorra also signed the letter.

The call came on the fourth anniversar­y of the WHO declaring the worsening Covid-19 situation a public health emergency of internatio­nal concern.

The Jan. 30, 2020, declaratio­n came when, outside China, there were fewer than 100 cases and no deaths.

But the pandemic quickly shredded economies and upturned lives. More than 7 million Covid deaths have been reported to the WHO, though the true toll is thought to be far higher.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? HEALTH BODY
The World Health Organizati­on’s name and logo are seen at its headquarte­rs in the city of Geneva, western Switzerlan­d on April 15, 2020.
AP FILE PHOTO HEALTH BODY The World Health Organizati­on’s name and logo are seen at its headquarte­rs in the city of Geneva, western Switzerlan­d on April 15, 2020.

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