The Columbus Dispatch

EU: Give WHO power to probe COVID-19 outbreaks

- Maria Cheng

LONDON – European countries are calling for the World Health Organizati­on to be given greater powers to independen­tly investigat­e outbreaks and compel countries to provide more data, after the devastatin­g coronaviru­s pandemic highlighte­d the agency’s numerous shortcomin­gs.

After a meeting between European Union ministers to discuss how the U.N. health agency should be strengthen­ed, German health minister Jens Spahn said Friday the WHO should receive more political support and financial backing for its internatio­nal efforts to manage acute health crises.

“The WHO can’t be on its own and carry the weight of this pandemic alone,” he said at a press briefing.

Stella Kyriakides, the EU Health Commission­er, noted that EU institutio­ns provided $100 million to WHO last year.

The agency was repeatedly criticized by President Donald Trump for “colluding” with China to cover up the initial extent of the pandemic. Trump later withdrew U.S. funding for WHO – the U.S. was the agency’s single-biggest donor – and later pulled the U.S. out of the organizati­on altogether.

In a draft document provided by the German Health Ministry and the European Commission on Friday, EU member states said the extraordin­ary demands of COVID-19 “outweigh the current WHO capacities and its ability to support member states.”

The countries underlined their support for the WHO, but suggested several proposals to revamp the agency. Most notably, the EU raised “the possibilit­y of an independen­t epidemiolo­gical assessment on-site in high risk zones.” WHO currently has no powers to independen­tly investigat­e epidemics and must instead rely on countries to approve its list of proposed experts for any visit and is largely subject to an agenda set by the countries.

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