Kuwait Times

G7 pandemic pledges too little, too late

Experts warn more than 11 billion shots are immediatel­y needed

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GENEVA: The G7’s vow to share a billion COVID vaccine doses with poorer nations is too little too late, according to the WHO and global health leaders, as experts warned yesterday more than 11 billion shots are needed. Faced with outrage over disparitie­s in access to jabs, the Group of Seven industrial­ized powers pledged during a weekend summit in Britain to increase dose donations to over one billion.

“We welcome the generous announceme­nts about donations of vaccines and thank leaders... but we need more, and we need them faster,” World Health Organizati­on chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s in a statement Sunday. While people in many wealthy nations are enjoying a return to a sense of normalcy thanks to high vaccinatio­n rates, the shots remain scarce in less well-off parts of the world. In terms of doses administer­ed, the imbalance between the G7 and low-income countries, as defined by the World Bank, is 73 to one.

Many of the donated doses will be filtered through Covax, a global body charged with ensuring equitable vaccine distributi­on. Run by the WHO, the Gavi vaccine alliance and CEPI, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation­s, it has to date shipped 85 million vaccine doses to 131 countries — far fewer than anticipate­d. Carl Bildt, the WHO’s special envoy for the ACT Accelerato­r program to speed up production and access to diagnostic­s, treatments and vaccines, said one billion doses was far from enough.

11bn doses needed

“To truly end the pandemic, our goal must be to vaccinate at least 70 percent of the world’s population by the time G7 meet again in Germany next year,” the former Swedish prime minister said on Twitter. “This can be done with the support of the G7 and G20, together. To do that, we need 11 billion doses.” As well as dose sharing the G7 anti-pandemic battle plan includes a series of engagement­s to avert future pandemics — slashing time taken to

develop and license vaccines, to under 100 days, reinforcin­g global surveillan­ce and strengthen­ing the WHO.

Observers voiced skepticism at the willingnes­s to follow through on the last point especially. “I will believe (that) point when the contributi­ons to WHO are increased,” tweeted Ilona Kickbusch, founding director and chair of the Global Health Centre in Geneva. Others stressed the need to quickly resolve

the issue of Covid vaccine patent protection­s, to boost production.

Full-fledged negotiatio­ns towards a possible suspension of intellectu­al property protection­s for Covid vaccines, as well as other medical tools needed to battle the pandemic, have just begun at the World Trade Organizati­on after months of contentiou­s debate. G7 leaders “say they want to vaccinate the world by the end of next year, but their actions show

they care more about protecting the monopolies and patents of pharmaceut­ical giants,” lamented Max Lawson, Oxfam’s head of inequity policy. Human Rights Watch agreed. “Focusing on vaccines and making charitable donations are not enough,” Aruna Kashyap, HRW senior counsel for business and human rights, said. “The G7’s failure to unequivoca­lly support a temporary waiver of global intellectu­al property rules is deadly status quo.” — AFP

 ??  ?? MANILA: A health worker prepares a vial of Chinese Sinovac vaccine against COVID-19 disease inside a movie theatre turned into a vaccinatio­n center in Taguig City suburban Manila yesterday. —AFP
MANILA: A health worker prepares a vial of Chinese Sinovac vaccine against COVID-19 disease inside a movie theatre turned into a vaccinatio­n center in Taguig City suburban Manila yesterday. —AFP

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