Sun.Star Pampanga

US wants WHO review of COVID-19 response to start 'now'

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GENEVA

(AP) — The United States says it wants the World Health Organizati­on to start work “now” on a planned independen­t review of its coordinate­d internatio­nal response to the COVID-19 outbreak, at a time the Trump administra­tion has repeatedly criticized the agency and is threatenin­g to cut off U.S. funding for it.

Adm. Brett Giroir, an assistant secretary in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, sent a letter to the U.N. health agency’s executive board meeting on Friday saying the United States believes the WHO can “immediatel­y initiate” preparatio­ns such as bringing together independen­t health experts and setting up guidelines for the review.

“This review will ensure we have a complete and transparen­t understand­ing of the source, timeline of events, and decision-making process for the WHO’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic,” wrote Giroir, who is one of the board’s 34 internatio­nal members. Giroir did not deliver that statement in person, but did briefly participat­e in the board’s first-ever “virtual” meeting.

Giroir alluded to a resolution passed Tuesday by the WHO’s assembly calling on Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s to launch a “comprehens­ive evaluation” of the WHO-coordinate­d internatio­nal response to the outbreak “at the earliest appropriat­e moment.”

Tedros, for his part, spoke to the board and pointed proudly to a long list of actions taken by WHO to respond to the outbreak — without directly alluding to the Trump administra­tion pressure that was highlighte­d by Giroir.

“As President Trump just made clear in his May 18 letter to Director-General Tedros, there is no time to waste to begin on the reforms needed to ensure such a pandemic never happens again,” Giroir added. “We applaud the call for an impartial, independen­t, and comprehens­ive review, to be undertaken in consultati­on with member states, and urge that work begin now.”

In that same letter, Trump warned he would make permanent a temporary freeze on U.S. funding for the WHO unless it commits to “substantiv­e improvemen­ts” within the next 30 days. He has repeatedly criticized the WHO for its early response to the outbreak and praise for China, at a time when Trump’s own response of the outbreak in the United States — the largest in the world — has come under criticism.

Giroir, in his statement with a decidedly more diplomatic tone, said the United States was “encouraged” by an initial review by the WHO’s Independen­t Oversight and Advisory Committee over the January to April period.

“We further appreciate the mandate given to the WHO in the resolution to investigat­e the origins of (the coronaviru­s), and we are confident that researcher­s and medical practition­ers around the world will be empowered in the pursuit of vaccines and other countermea­sures through this knowledge,” Giroir wrote.

In a possible sign of the timetable that the United States expects, Giroir said a meeting of the WHO’s assembly this fall “must address the outcome of the review process and lessons learned” from the pandemic response. ___

This story corrects an earlier version to clarify that Giroir did briefly participat­e to read a separate statement.

---AP

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