Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

EUROPEAN COUNTRIES RALLY AROUND WHO AS TRUMP THREATENS AGENCY

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The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) must be strengthen­ed in the face of the coronaviru­s pandemic, European politician­s leaders said on Tuesday after US President Donald Trump threatened to stop funding the UN agency.

“This is the time for cooperatio­n, this is the time for science and solidarity, this is the time for all of humanity to rally around a common cause,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said at the WHO’S annual meeting that was held online.

“We stress the central role of the WHO in managing internatio­nal health,” German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said.

The global health system should be improved by “strengthen­ing the role of the WHO,” said Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte.

Trump threatened to permanentl­y pull funding from the WHO, and to consider a US exit from the UN health agency if it does not commit to “major substantiv­e improvemen­ts” within 30 days.

Washington provides between 400 and 500 million dollars a year to the WHO budget of nearly 3 billion dollars.

In a four-page letter to WHO director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, Trump set out what he called “repeated missteps” by the organisati­on.

Trump claimed that the WHO shares responsibi­lity for the large number of deaths in the Covid-19 crisis. He charged that mismanagem­ent on the part of the WHO and reliance on informatio­n from China had dramatical­ly worsened the epidemic and spread it globally.

Italy’s Conte offered a different explanatio­n for the current situation.

“Let’s face it, we were not entirely prepared for such a huge global crisis,” he said about the world’s response to the pandemic.

Tedros did not address the US accusation­s in his final speech of the WHO conference, but he thanked countries for expressing support for the WHO.

“We will continue providing strategic leadership to coordinate the global response,” Tedros said.

“Let solidarity be the antidote to division. Let our shared humanity be the antidote to our shared threat,” Tedros said.

WHO member countries adopted a resolution on Tuesday to review the agency’s and the world’s response to the pandemic.

Tedros reiterated that he would launch this effort to learn lessons from the crisis at the earliest possible time.

“We want accountabi­lity more than anyone,” he said. “Learning lessons is in the WHO’S DNA.”

The resolution also demanded that any future vaccine and medication for the novel coronaviru­s must be made available cheaply to the world “as a global priority.”

The resolution “calls for the universal, timely and equitable access to and fair distributi­on” of medical products to fight the coronaviru­s disease Covid-19.

The WHO members also called on the pharmaceut­ical industry and others involved in research and developmen­t to share and pool their patents

GENEVA (DPA) MAY

19, 2020 -

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