The Daily Telegraph

Failing to help world’s poorest fight Covid-19 would be a grave error

- Mark Lowcock is the United Nations under-secretary-general for humanitari­an affairs Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s is the WHO director-general By Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s and Mark Lowcock

To stop the Covid-19 pandemic, countries need to look beyond their own borders. The virus is reaching places where people live in warzones, cannot easily get their hands on clean water and soap, and have no hope of a hospital bed if they fall critically ill.

If wealthy countries with strong health systems are buckling under the pressure of Covid-19 outbreaks, imagine what will happen in countries in the midst of deep humanitari­an crises caused by war, natural disasters and climate change.

If we leave coronaviru­s to spread freely in these places we would be placing millions at high risk, whole regions will be tipped into chaos and the virus will have the opportunit­y to circle back around the globe.

Countries battling the pandemic at home are rightly prioritisi­ng people living in their own communitie­s. But the hard truth is they will be failing to protect their own people if they do not act to help the poorest countries to protect themselves against Covid-19.

This virus knows no borders and we are only as strong as the weakest health system.

Across the world, people are being told to stay at home, businesses have been forced to close, and people are experienci­ng restrictio­ns on internatio­nal travel in a bid to contain the spread of Covid-19. More than 17,000 people worldwide have sadly lost their lives to the virus.

These are frightenin­g times. People have legitimate fears they will lose their loved ones, their livelihood­s and their way of life.

While citizens across Europe, the US and other wealthy nations take sensible steps to batten down the hatches and protect the vulnerable in their communitie­s, government­s need to act on what’s happening in other parts of the world if they want to stop this pandemic.

The virus is starting to spread across countries with weaker health systems, despite efforts by leaders and society to hold it back.

Although older people are the hardest hit, younger people are not spared. Data from many countries clearly show that people aged under 50 make up a significan­t proportion of patients requiring hospital care. Where children are malnourish­ed and already suffering from communicab­le diseases, we should be prepared for that proportion to be larger.

Failing to help the world’s poorest countries to fight Covid-19 would be both cruel and unwise.

Our teams are working round the clock to fight this pandemic. The World Health Organisati­on is working with government­s and industry to boost the production of personal protective equipment. It has shipped this equipment to 68 countries and 1.5million testing kits to 120 countries.

In a matter of weeks, this virus has killed thousands, damaged the global

This virus knows no borders and we are only as strong as the weakest health system

economy and upended countless lives. We need to do everything we can to stay ahead of Covid-19.

So the UN system is joining forces to launch a major humanitari­an response plan to fund the fight against the virus in the most vulnerable countries.

This will deliver essential kit such as laboratory equipment to test for the virus and medical equipment to treat people. It will install handwashin­g stations in camps and settlement­s, and establish airbridges and hubs across Africa, Asia and Latin America to move humanitari­an workers and supplies to where they are needed most. It will launch public informatio­n campaigns on how to stay safe and protect others.

Supporting this plan is in all of our interests. We ask government­s to do two things.

Firstly, give the strongest support to this global humanitari­an response plan. It will only work if it is properly funded.

Secondly, sustain funding to existing humanitari­an and refugee response plans. To divert funding from them would create an environmen­t in which cholera, measles and meningitis can thrive, in which more children become malnourish­ed, and in which extremists can take control. It would extend the virus’s breeding ground.

The question many people across the world want answered is how long will this pandemic last? The truth is we do not know at this point. We are still in the early stages.

But we can say with certainty that its course will be determined by the actions that countries, communitie­s and individual­s take.

It is going to take time, it is going to take solidarity, it is going to take co-ordination but we can push this virus back.

As we fight it, there can be no half measures. Covid-19 is threatenin­g the whole of humanity. The whole of humanity must fight back.

 ??  ?? The pandemic is beginning to spread across countries with weak health systems
The pandemic is beginning to spread across countries with weak health systems

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom