China Daily Global Weekly

Crucial role in global war on the pandemic

China’s emergency aid effort largest of its kind since nation’s founding

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

For Li Jun, vice-president of the Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Chinese Medicine, fighting COVID-19 was a war on two fronts. In April 2020, after battling an epidemic in his home province, Li led a team of medical experts to Malaysia to share Chinese health workers’ firsthand experience in tackling the novel coronaviru­s.

Scientists and health workers sharing their data and knowledge is one of China’s key methods of contributi­ng to the global efforts against COVID-19. China has dispatched 37 expert teams to 34 countries over the past three years, according to the National Health Commission.

“There is a Malaysian proverb that goes, ‘Bukit sama didaki, lurah sama dituruni’, which translates into ‘Climb the hill together, traverse the ravine together’,” Li said.

“China and Malaysia share a traditiona­l friendship. We felt a strong duty to share our knowledge and help our Malaysian peers control COVID-19 in their home country.”

Chinese experts were similarly offering assistance in Iran, Italy, Pakistan, Russia, the Philippine­s and Peru, as well as countries in Africa, a feat that embodied the vision of building a global community of health for all, according to the Foreign Ministry.

Wang Xiaotao, former director of the China Internatio­nal Developmen­t

Cooperatio­n Agency, said many countries had donated valuable supplies to China when it was hit hard, and it was heartwarmi­ng for China to return the favor.

“Even when facing a serious COVID-19 situation at home, China promptly launched an emergency humanitari­an aid effort, the largest of its kind since the nation’s founding,” Wang wrote in an article in Foreign Affairs Journal, which is published by the Chinese People’s Institute of Foreign Affairs.

“The COVID-19 pandemic recognizes no borders and ethnicitie­s. It is a common enemy of humanity and can only be overcome with solidarity and collaborat­ion,” Wang wrote. “China will never stand aloof from a friend in need, nor will it attach conditions for selfish gains when extending a helping hand.”

Mi Feng, a spokesman for the National Health Commission, said at a news briefing in mid-January that China has promptly shared vital informatio­n with the world, which had served as the scientific basis for developing vaccines and diagnosis tools.

These vital pieces of informatio­n included confirming the pathogen was a novel coronaviru­s, sharing the genome sequence of the virus, and publishing China’s treatment and prevention plans, he said.

China has provided massive quantities of medical supplies for 153 countries and 15 internatio­nal organizati­ons, Mi said. It also held over 300 exchanges on COVID-19 control

measures and medical treatment with over 180 countries and regions and more than 10 internatio­nal organizati­ons.

Mi said China was the first country to propose the COVID-19 vaccine as a global public good and the first to cooperate in vaccine production with developing countries. He added that China had provided more than 2.2 billion vaccine doses for over 120 countries and internatio­nal organizati­ons.

At the same news briefing, Wu Xi, director-general of the Department of Consular Affairs of the Foreign Ministry, said China has maintained an open, transparen­t and responsibl­e attitude when sharing its data with the internatio­nal community, including holding over 60 technical exchanges with the World Health Organizati­on, five of which were recently held.

On Jan 14, Ma Xiaowei, head of the

National Health Commission, spoke with WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s about the COVID-19 situation in China.

The WHO said in a statement that Chinese officials provided it informatio­n on the COVID-19 situation in the country and also made the informatio­n public through a news conference. The informatio­n shared covered a range of topics, including outpatient clinics, hospitaliz­ation, patients requiring emergency treatment and critical care, and deaths related to COVID-19 infection in hospitals.

Ahmed Ogwell Ouma, acting director of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, said China’s collaborat­ions with countries such as Egypt, Algeria and Morocco offered alternativ­e sources of COVID-19 vaccines to people on the African continent, especially at the height of the pandemic in the middle of 2021.

The partnershi­p has enabled the

continent to produce the vaccines locally, thus reducing the need for importing and transporti­ng vaccines from outside Africa, he told Xinhua News Agency.

Sergio Held, a journalist based in Colombia, said Chinese vaccines brought life in Latin America back to normal, as the Rio de Janeiro Carnival in Brazil made a comeback in April 2022 after being canceled the year before due to the pandemic.

Mehmood ul Hassan Khan, executive director of the Center for South Asia & Internatio­nal Studies in Islamabad, Pakistan, said China’s optimizati­on of its COVID-19 control measures will unleash the vitality of its economy and bolster the internatio­nal community’s confidence in its developmen­t potential.

“China has proactivel­y facilitate­d the optimizati­on of the global public health governance,” he wrote in an article published in People’s Daily.

 ?? TANG CHHIN SOTHY / AFP ?? A boy receives a COVID-19 vaccine from China’s Sinovac Biotech at a health center in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, on Feb 24 last year.
TANG CHHIN SOTHY / AFP A boy receives a COVID-19 vaccine from China’s Sinovac Biotech at a health center in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, on Feb 24 last year.

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