Gulf Today

Experts call for collective response to Covid-19 crisis

Panelists at Trends e-symposium highlight medical, economic, and political dimensions of coronaviru­s pandemic and discuss ways of dealing with its aftermath

- Imran Mojib, Special Correspond­ent

Experts participat­ing in the first ever e-symposium organised by Trends Research & Advisory late on Tuesday highlighte­d the ongoing struggle between forces of globalisat­ion and protection­ism but emphasised the need for a collective response to the Covid-19 challenge.

Addressing the e-symposium — Confrontin­g the Challenges of COVID-19: A New Global Outlook — panelists discussed the lessons learned from the pandemic and the growing need for a concerted and collective approach to tackle the challenge.

Mahmood Mohammed Sharif, Director of Economic Studies and Dr. Stephen Blackwell, Director of Research & Strategic Studies at TRENDS Research & Advisory moderated the e-symposium, as the experts also underlined the geostrateg­ic and economic fallout of this public health crisis which threatens to derail the global economy.

Prof. Maurizio Barbeschi, Adviser to the Executive Director, World Health Emergencie­s (WHE) Programme at The World Health Organisati­on (WHO), delivered his view in his personal capacity.

“We have been preparing for pandemic since SARS and it is impressive how not prepared the planet was,” Prof. Barbeschi said adding that it is not just the peak of the pandemic but also the bumps and re-entry to normalcy will have to be managed.

“Even vaccines may have to be handled with extreme care for not creating groups of haves and have-nots,” he said Prof. Barbeschi also said that it is obvious that travel bans did not work well. “The first reaction of government­s so far wasn’t smart, quick or big or large enough to stop the exponentia­l move of the virus,” he said.

Gulfaraz Khan, Professor of Viral Pathology and Chair, Department of Medical Microbiolo­gy and Immunology at the College of Medicine and Health Sciences, UAE University, said that the scientific community is united against Covid-19 at one end of the spectrum but a lack of preparedne­ss has also been exposed.

He stressed that it must be acknowledg­ed that the Chinese authoritie­s identified and made the virus sequence available to the internatio­nal community within two weeks of the outbreak. “We have also seen an unpreceden­ted number of publicatio­ns on Covid-19,” Prof. Khan said pointing out that the world failed to identify the threat early.

“We had approximat­ely a month to look at the outbreak even though the disease was spreading. The majority of the world’s cases happened after February so we need to learn lessons as a global community. It is absolutely essential to do our best in research and developmen­t to prevent another global pandemic from killing so many people,” he said.

Prof. Khan also ruled out the possibilit­y of a vaccine coming out soon. “It could take 12-18 months if you add the time needed in mass production and in making it available around the world,” he said.

Delivering an internatio­nal security perspectiv­e, Dr Hussein Ibish, Senior Resident Scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington, said it is not yet clear whether parochiali­sm will triumph over populism in the aftermath of this crisis.

“There is discourse emerging from Europe that may not reflect the ground reality. There seems to be an adrenaline rush for insularity and parochiali­sm promoted by populism which is not helping,” he said.

Dr. Ibish said that when it comes to internatio­nal cooperatio­n, he foresees the need to revive multilater­alism but the bad actors are not changing their ways.

Dr. David Meyer, Associate Professor of Security and Global Studies and Programme Director, Master of Arts in Diplomacy at the College of Security and Global Studies, the American University in the Emirates, said the US will continue to demand favourable trade deals as national interest cannot be wished away “After this crisis ends, protection­ism will come back with a vengeance as more and more countries slip into recession. If the quarantine lasts more than six months then we are looking at economic depression,” he said.

Sharing China’s experience with Covid-19, Prof. Yong Wang of the School of Internatio­nal Studies and Director, Center for Internatio­nal Political Economy at Peking University, said China did the right thing by taking very tough measures such as locking down Wuhan.

“Chinese scientists shared genetic sequencing, which helped in data compilatio­n and intelligen­ce gathering to tackle the virus. The pandemic is under control in China and factories and companies are opening now. However, the government is still applying a very cautious approach,” he said.

 ??  ?? Experts participat­e in the first ever e-symposium organised by Trends Research & Advisory.
Experts participat­e in the first ever e-symposium organised by Trends Research & Advisory.

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