Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Plea to Boris: ‘Give us the jab and we’ll finish the job’

Britain may hold the key to Lanka’s AstraZenec­a shortage as UNICEF asks Boris to share huge stockpile with nations

- By Don Manu 'THE SUNDAY-BEST SUNDAY SLAM'

Lanka should make a Churchilli­an plea to British Prime Minister Boris Johnson to give us the Oxford AstraZenec­a vaccine to meet the country’s current dearth, after it was revealed Britain has a stockpile of the vaccine, far in excess of her own needs.

The United Nation’s Children Fund, commonly referred to as UNICEF, told Britain’s Independen­t newspaper this week that Britain could share 20 percent of its available Covid-19 vaccine doses and still meet its target to give all adults their first shot by the end of July.

Two thirds of adults in the UK have now had at least one vaccine dose and almost 18 million are fully vaccinated. Real-world data suggests the jabs prevent eight to nine out of 10 severe Covid cases, almost all deaths and also slash transmissi­on of the virus by half.

The charity warned that the success of Britain’s vaccinatio­n programme could be “reversed” and it could face a fresh wave of infections from mutations of the virus unless more is done to share vaccines around the globe. They warned hogging vaccines and allowing the virus to continue spreading elsewhere would raise the risk of a new variant emerging and coming back to wreak havoc in Britain.

UNICEF-UK called on the government and other G7 countries to start sharing vaccines through the vaccine sharing facility Covax from June to ensure vulnerable people can be vaccinated.

UNICEF said the UK should give away a fifth of its Covid vaccines to help poorer countries protect their citizens. The British media, it is said, had reported that the UK has ordered 517 million doses though it required around 160 million to vaccinate all adults and give them booster jabs in the autumn, as planned. Analysis by the UK arm of the United Nations Children’s Fund asserted that the country could have enough leftover doses to fully vaccinate 50m people – the population of Spain or South Korea.

In the light of UNICEF-UK requesting Britain to help less fortunate counties on the principle of reciprocal altruism lest the virus returns from a foreign land to haunt Britain again, the Lankan Government should move in double quick time to lay first claim to Britain’s largesse.

UNICEF-UK’s request to the British Government to share her blessings with other nations is a heaven sent opportunit­y for Lanka to explore the possibilit­y of obtaining her much needed stock of the AstraZenec­a vaccine. The Government has tried to obtain it from Indonesia but it is still uncertain whether her efforts will prove successful. Last Friday evening, President Gotabaya appealed to WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom to use his good offices to find for Lanka the 600,000 doses. The President later tweeted that “I believe he will make effort to fulfil Lanka’s need for 600,000 doses of AstraZenec­a for the 2nd dose of vaccinatio­n.”

Given that 600,000 Lankans are in a quandary, left high and dry after having being initially vaccinated with the Oxford AstraZenec­a vaccine and now have no option but to take the same brand which is presently unavailabl­e, the Lanka Government should write to British Prime Minister Boris Johnson forthwith, appealing to his and his country’s Christian heart and generosity to come to the aid of a fellow Commonweal­th member -- that exclusive club of Britain’s former colonies, which still pays symbolic obeisance to Britain’s former role by having Britain’s reigning sovereign as the titular Head of the Commonweal­th of Nations.

After all, having occupied this island for nearly 150 years and enjoyed without interrupti­on or disturbanc­e the spoils of conquests in return for language, laws and alien customs, donating a measly 600,000 doses out of a stockpiled medical arsenal of a reported 517 million vials, is the least Britain can do, in the name of humanity if nothing else, to help 600,000 Lankans stay COVID proof and alive.

Britain should be tacitly reminded of how, when Britain stood alone with her back to the wall in the face of the unstoppabl­e Nazi advance towards her island’s sceptred shores during World War II, her Prime Minister Sir Winston Churchill made a public address to the American President Franklin Roosevelt appealing for American arms for sheer survival.

The begging plea was partly prompted by Roosevelt’s handwritte­n letter quoting a verse from Longfellow’s poem ‘The Building of a Ship’ which Churchill mentioned in his famous appeal, broadcast to the nation over BBC radio. He said:

“The other day President Roosevelt gave his opponent in the late Presidenti­al Election, a letter of introducti­on to me, and in it he wrote out a verse, in his own handwritin­g from Longfellow, which he said ‘applies to your people as it does to us’. Here is the verse: ‘Sail on, O Ship of State!

Sail on, O Union, so strong and great

Humanity with all its fears With all the hopes of future years Is hanging breathless on thy fate’

True. Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson are not on the same’matey’ terms; nor do they share an excellent rapport as did Churchill and Roosevelt

“What is the answer that I shall give, in your name, to this great man, the thrice chosen head of a nation of a hundred and thirty million people? Here is the answer which I will give to President Roosevelt. Put your confidence in us. Give us your faith and your blessing, and under Providence, all is well.

“We shall not fail or falter, we shall not weaken or tire. Neither the sudden shock of battle nor the long drawn trials of vigilance or exertion, will wear us down.”

And then Britain’s celebrated war time Prime Minister Churchill, who once stated he was lucky to have been called to give the roar to Britain’s lion heart, ended his plea to Roosevelt: “Give us the tools, and we will finish the job.”

True. Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson are not on the same’matey’ terms; nor do they share an excellent rapport as did Churchill and Roosevelt. And if there is no love lost between them, what better occasion than this can there be to thaw the détente, to melt the icy relations that now exist between the two countries following the disastrous UNHRC Geneva summit in March when Britain put Lanka on the human rights dock?

But in the face of the coronaviru­s pandemic such issues should not muffle the plaintive bleat of humanity nor deny a section of it, the potentiall­y lifesaving protection of the vaccine, especially if one has enough to spare. If the presidenti­al appeal fails on deaf ears and fails, at least it will not be for the want of trying. The effort, though it may prove vain, will be laudable.

With UNICEF-UK paving the path by its request to the British Government not to miserly hoard its vaccine gold but to share it with less privileged nations, the opportunit­y has presented itself to the Lankan President to be the first to knock on Downing Street’s No 10 door bearing his appeal on behalf of Lanka. Money is no object since the World Bank on Friday granted Lanka an 80 million dollar loan, specifical­ly for vaccine purchases.

Referring to shared ties, to shared values, to a shared vision, to a common destiny to be forged through the same shared commitment to democratic ideals, institutio­ns and principles, the presidenti­al message must appeal to Britain to transcend their diplomatic war of attrition, the chilly atmosphere of hostility and their appalling horror of Lanka’s tainted track record on human rights, to suspend their grouses, their prejudices, their distastes and hold in abeyance their judgements for the present, and answer Lanka’s desperate cry for succor made amidst impending doom, and provide her with not only 600,000 of the Oxford AstraZenec­a vaccines but also the necessary wherewitha­l Britain has at its command to give to vanquish the common COVID foe.

And finally state that if Britain rises to the occasion in the name of suffering humanity and gives us the jabs to finish the job, then -- to paraphrase the words of Churchill -- should the Britishled Commonweal­th of Nations last for a thousand years, men will still say: “This was Britain’s finest hour.”

 ??  ?? MAKE APPEAL TO BRITAIN’S PM: Give Boris the chance to make the British relive ‘their finest hour’
MAKE APPEAL TO BRITAIN’S PM: Give Boris the chance to make the British relive ‘their finest hour’

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