San Antonio Express-News

Pope urges nations to share vaccines

- By Elisabetta Povoledo and Marc Santora

ROME — Pope Francis on Friday called on world leaders, businesses and internatio­nal organizati­ons to help ensure that the most vulnerable and needy have access to newly developed coronaviru­s vaccines.

Instead of speaking to the tens of thousands usually gathered on St. Peter’s Square, Francis made his annual Christmas address from a grandiose hall inside the Apostolic Palace of the Vatican.

In a year in which the pandemic plunged the world into economic and social uncertaint­y, the pope was only one of many Christian leaders and pastors around the globe who issued big, weighty messages to small, in-person audiences.

Francis used his traditiona­l Christmas address to argue that widespread suffering should compel people to reflect on their common humanity and apply those principles to how vaccine rollouts are handled.

“We cannot allow the various forms of nationalis­m closed in on themselves to prevent us from living as the truly human family that we are,” the pope said.

“Nor can we allow the virus of radical individual­ism to get the better of us and make us indifferen­t to the suffering of other brothers and sisters,” he said. “I cannot place myself ahead of others, letting the law of the marketplac­e and patents take precedence over the law of love and the health of humanity.”

Nearly a quarter of the world’s population may not have access to a coronaviru­s vaccine until at least 2022, according to a recent study published in the British Medical Journal. The leaders of many poorer countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America have said they are concerned that they will be unable to provide the vaccine for much, if any, of their population­s.

The pope traditiona­lly uses his Christmas Day address to focus attention on the conflicts or natural disasters that have plagued the planet in the past year.

And he did so again Friday, asking the world to recall the suffering of so many in 2020 — from the Yazidis in Iraq to the Rohingya in Myanmar. He said it was the duty of every citizen of the world to help end violence and ease suffering.

Francis said the world faced a “moment in history, marked by the ecological crisis and grave economic and social imbalances only worsened by the coronaviru­s pandemic.”

But it was the pandemic that largely shaped the world this year and the pandemic, he said, that would allow humanity to really consider what global cooperatio­n can achieve.

At the end of his address, bells pealed and echoed in an empty St. Peter’s Square.

 ?? Vatican Media / Associated Press ?? Pope Francis, center, delivers the Urbi et Orbi (Latin for “to the city and to the world” ) Christmas blessing in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican. The pope called on world leaders to share COVID-19 vaccines.
Vatican Media / Associated Press Pope Francis, center, delivers the Urbi et Orbi (Latin for “to the city and to the world” ) Christmas blessing in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican. The pope called on world leaders to share COVID-19 vaccines.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States