Western Daily Press

Internatio­nal treaty aims to tackle Covid-19 ‘gaps’

- AINE FOX & ALEXANDER BRITTON Press Associatio­n

THE world remains vulnerable to future pandemics without an internatio­nally co-ordinated effort to prepare for such events, global health leaders have warned.

A treaty to “systematic­ally tackle the gaps exposed by Covid-19” has been proposed to address issues including research, informatio­nsharing and production and distributi­on of medicines and vaccines.

The treaty would be based on the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) constituti­on including the principles of “health for all and no discrimina­tion”, the body’s director-general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said.

Twenty-four world leaders, including UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his French and German counterpar­ts Emmanuel Macron and Angela Merkel, have put their names to a call for such a treaty.

Notable names missing from the list include US President Joe Biden and Chinese leader Xi Jinping, but Dr Tedros said this should not be seen as a problem, and he expected all 194 WHO member states would be involved in the treaty’s negotiatio­n. He told a press briefing there have been member state discussion­s on the treaty, and feedback from the US and China has been “positive”.

He said: “From the discussion­s we had meeting during member states sessions, the comment from member states including the US and China was actually positive and we hope the future engagement­s will bring all countries (together).”

Coronaviru­s has led to nearly 2.8 million deaths worldwide, according to figures from Johns Hopkins University, while 127 million people have been infected by the virus first detected in China in late 2019.

The letter from national leaders, published on Tuesday in newspapers across the world, said Covid-19 has been the “biggest challenge to the global community since the 1940s”, noting the two world wars brought about an era of co-operation between nation states.

Dr Tedros said: “Without an internatio­nally co-ordinated, all of government, all of society, one-health approach to pandemic preparedne­ss and response, we remain vulnerable.

“It (the pandemic) has shown how much we need a universal commitment to basic public health principles as the foundation for our work to prevent, detect and respond to epidemic and pandemic threats.

“The idea behind the proposal for such a treaty is to systematic­ally tackle the gaps exposed by Covid-19.

“The world has come together as never before to take on this crisis.”

He said the treaty “will strengthen the implementa­tion of the internatio­nal health regulation­s and, critically, it would also provide a framework for internatio­nal co-operation and solidarity”.

He added that whether it was ratified “is a matter for our member states, the nations of the world”.

The letter says there is a shared commitment to “ensuring universal and equitable access to safe, efficaciou­s and affordable vaccines, medicines and diagnostic­s for this and future pandemics”. There have been tensions over vaccine rollout across Europe and the UK, with talks ongoing on issues including jab production, after European Union leaders backed more stringent vaccine shipment controls as the bloc struggles with its rollout, but stopped short of an export ban.

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