The Sunday Telegraph

Harry and Meghan get political at New York vax concert

- By Jamie Johnson in New York and Hannah Furness

THE Duke and Duchess of Sussex hit out at “ultra-wealthy pharmaceut­ical companies” for not sharing the recipes for their coronaviru­s vaccines last night in a highly political speech at a music concert in New York.

In their final appearance of a threeday tour of the Big Apple, the couple took to the stage in Central Park and decried the “misinforma­tion, bureaucrac­y, lack of transparen­cy and access” around vaccines. “We are battling more than the virus alone,” said the Duke. “This is a human rights crisis.”

His pleas were echoed by a passionate Meghan, who said: “It is wrong that so much of the vaccine supply has only gone to just 10 wealthy nations so far and not everyone else. It’s just not ok.”

The Duke said: “Guys, we have what we need to vaccinate the world. But the experts told us: here’s what’s getting in the way. They said many countries are ready to produce vaccines back home yet they aren’t allowed to because ultrawealt­hy pharmaceut­ical companies are not sharing the recipes to make them.

“These countries have the means, the abilities and the workers to start manufactur­ing. All they are waiting for is the vaccine intellectu­al property to be waived and the vaccine technology to be transferre­d over. And by the way, many of these vaccines were publicly funded. They are your vaccines. You paid for them.”

The Duchess asked people to think about the vaccine doses that have expired and been thrown away.

“That’s like throwing away life vests when those around you are drowning,” she said.

The Duke finished by asking the crowd to shout louder in aid of vaccine equity and said: “My wife and I believe that where you’re born should not dictate your ability to survive,” which was greeted by huge cheers.

The Global Citizen Live event featured a number of concerts in major cities across the world over a 24-hour period. As well as calling for equal access to coronaviru­s vaccines, the movement called for an end to global poverty and highlighte­d the devastatin­g effects of climate change. In London, Kylie Minogue was the headliner, while Elton John and Ed Sheeran played in Paris. Coldplay and Jennifer Lopez entertaine­d the crowd in New York, while Stevie Wonder took to the stage in Los Angeles. There were events in Lagos, Mumbai, Rio and Sydney.

Alok Sharma, President of the COP 26 climate summit in Glasgow, also appeared in New York and invited the crowd to “call on the the biggest greenhouse gas emitters and the G20 nations to make much bolder commitment­s to cut emissions.

“We must protect our precious planet. The window is closing fast, he said.”

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