Yorkshire Post

No 10 backs WHO role despite US threat to funding

-

DOWNING STREET stressed the “important role” the World Health Organisati­on has in tackling the coronaviru­s pandemic after Donald Trump threatened to permanentl­y pull US funding.

Boris Johnson’s official spokesman also stressed that the UK was not recommendi­ng taking hydroxychl­oroquine for Covid-19 after the US president said he was taking the malaria drug.

Mr Trump admitted he was using it to protect against coronaviru­s, despite there being no evidence to suggest it is remotely effective and his own government warning of its dangers.

His surprise statement came before he told the WHO to commit to “major substantiv­e improvemen­ts” within 30 days or he will make his temporary funding freeze permanent.

With the US having the highest coronaviru­s death toll in the world, Mr Trump has repeatedly attacked the organisati­on and accused the UN health body of being a “puppet of China”.

Boris Johnson’s official spokesman said: “Coronaviru­s is a global challenge and it is essential that countries come together to tackle this shared threat. The World Health Organisati­on has an important role to play in leading the global health response.”

He added that the UK has long advocated for reform to make the organisati­on more flexible and responsive but said “we have no plans to stop funding the WHO”.

Mr Trump’s threat prompted criticism from The Lancet after he cited the British medical journal in the letter to WHO director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s.

The president claimed the WHO “consistent­ly ignored credible reports of the virus spreading in Wuhan in early December 2019 or even earlier”, including in The Lancet.

But the journal said “this statement is factually incorrect”. In a statement, The Lancet said it did not publish a report on an outbreak in China in December, with the first coming on January 24.

Meanwhile, Mr Trump told reporters that despite having “zero symptoms” of Covid-19 he had been taking hydroxychl­oroquine “for about a week-and-a-half now” after requesting it from a White House doctor.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom