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> G7 UPS VACCINE FUNDS AFTER CRITICISM

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The G7 promised Friday to ramp up health funding for poorer nations amid accusation­s they are hoarding coronaviru­s vaccines, as France and the United Kingdom vowed to donate vaccines to those without them.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, this year’s chair of the G7, vowed to free up any surplus UK vaccines for poorer countries at an unspecifie­d future date, and underlined the need for collective action to recover from the pandemic. Britain has already committed US$766 million to Covax.

“We’ve got to make sure the whole world is vaccinated because this is a global pandemic and it’s no use one country being far ahead of another, we’ve got to move together,” he said in opening remarks at the online summit, the G7’s first since last April.

At the G7, US President Joe Biden brought a pledge of US$4 billion (4.6 billion euros) in US aid to the United Nation’s Covax fund to buy vaccines for global distributi­on. Officials, speaking off the record, told journalist­s though that the US would not share doses until its domestic needs were met.

Germany said it was giving an extra 1.5 billion euros for the global rollout, and the European Union doubled its own Covax funding to one billion euros.

The total in G7 commitment­s stands at 7.5 billion euros, the group said in a joint statement following the talks.

“Drawing on our strengths and values as democratic, open economies and societies, we will work together and with others to make 2021 a turning point for multilater­alism and to shape a recovery that promotes the health and prosperity of our people and planet,” the leaders added.

But ahead of the gathering, French President Emmanuel Macron had demanded richer nations go further by transferri­ng three to five percent of their existing stock to Africa.

“It’s an unpreceden­ted accelerati­on of global inequality and it’s politicall­y unsustaina­ble too because it’s paving the way for a war of influence over vaccines,” he told the Financial Times, as Russia and China step up free or low-cost distributi­on of their own jabs.

Rich countries have come under fire for hoarding Covid-19 jabs at the expense of poorer countries, despite warnings from health experts that vaccines can only end the pandemic if they are distribute­d globally.

UN warns of vaccine inequities On Wednesday, the United Nations led calls for a coordinate­d global effort to vaccinate against Covid-19, warning that gaping inequities in initial efforts put the whole planet at risk.

Secretary-general António Guterres voiced alarm that just 10 nations have administer­ed 75 percent of doses so far – and 130 countries have had none at all.

“The world urgently needs a global vaccinatio­n plan to bring together all those with the required power, scientific expertise and production and financial capacities,” Guterres said.

“If the virus is allowed to spread like wildfire in the Global South, it will mutate again and again. New variants could become more transmissi­ble, more deadly and, potentiall­y, threaten the effectiven­ess of current vaccines and diagnostic­s,” Guterres said.

“This can prolong the pandemic significan­tly, enabling the virus to come back to plague the Global North.”

Henrietta Fore, head of the UN children’s agency UNICEF, said: “The only way out of this pandemic for any of us is to ensure vaccinatio­ns are available for all of us.”

Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard also denounced the “injustice” of what he called a “deepening gap” as wealthy countries “monopolise the vaccines.”

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