The Manila Times

NATIONS FAIL TO REACH PANDEMIC ACCORD

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GENEVA: Two years of talks aimed at reaching a landmark global agreement on handling future pandemics failed to seal a deal in time on Thursday, and will restart next month for one final push.

Traumatize­d by Covid-19, which shredded economies, overturned societies, crippled health systems and killed millions, countries are trying to craft an internatio­nal accord on pandemic prevention, preparedne­ss and response.

While they largely agree on the principles of what should be done when the next pandemic strikes, nations are still at odds over how far they are prepared to go to turn those notions into binding commitment­s.

The ninth and supposedly final two-week round of talks therefore ended Thursday without finding a breakthrou­gh.

“You are not far away from concluding a deal,” World Health Organizati­on chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s told countries as the talks petered out at the WHO headquarte­rs in Geneva.

“I always keep hope alive and I am hopeful that you will.

“The treaty is a life-saving instrument, not merely a piece of paper,” he added.

“It holds the power to transform our collective response to future pandemics, to protect lives and to safeguard the well-being of communitie­s.”

He urged nations to work towards getting a final agreement by the end of May.

Mindful that a pandemic could hit at any time, the plan was to finalize an agreement at these talks, so it could be approved by the WHO’s 194 member states at their annual assembly, which starts on May 27.

Instead, fresh talks will run from April 29 to May 10.

The Intergover­nmental Negotiatin­g Body (INB) conducting the talks will draw up a new draft text no later than April 18 and work to complete talks by May 5.

The current draft has ballooned from 30 pages to nearly 100, with suggested amendments.

Some participan­ts want the INB to cut it down to 20 pages.

“It’s just too long,” said one Western diplomat.

“It’s too detailed and too broad. Agreeing on 30 pages with such a level of uncertaint­y in such a short time is impossible.”

The main issues of contention include shared access to emerging pathogens, better prevention and monitoring of disease outbreaks, reliable financing and transferri­ng pandemic-fighting technology to poorer countries.

Ultimately, the talks have come to the crunch over the balance between richer and poorer nations.

Wealthier states want immediate informatio­n-sharing on new and emerging pathogens with pandemic potential, as well as strict — and expensive — preparedne­ss obligation­s for all countries.

In return, developing countries want water-tight language on technology transfer and equitable access to vaccines, tests and treatments.

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