Albuquerque Journal

As Delta variant explodes, world allows vaccine apartheid

- AMY GOODMAN & DENIS MOYNIHAN Columnists

The term “delta” in science and mathematic­s denotes a difference, or a gap; as in the delta between two values. In geography, a delta is where a river meets the sea, spreading out, covering the most area in its course. In reference to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, Delta is the highly contagious variant of the SARS-CoV-2 virus that is tearing through unvaccinat­ed population­s around the globe. First referred to by scientists as B.1.617.2, the Delta variant is more contagious than others and may lead to more serious cases of COVID-19. The best protection against this or other coronaviru­s variants is to get vaccinated. In wealthy nations like the United States, where over 62% of the eligible population has received at least one vaccine shot, COVID-19 case rates and deaths are the lowest they have been since March of 2020 and continue to fall. Conversely, in the world’s poorest countries, only between 0.3-0.9% of the population has gotten a vaccine shot, and the virus is spreading virtually unchecked.

This delta between the rich and the poor is the result of vaccine apartheid. While this inequity persists, none of us will truly be safe.

“The pandemic has mutated,” Achal Prabhala, coordinato­r of AccessIBSA, which campaigns for access to medicines in India, Brazil and South Africa, said recently on the Democracy Now! news hour. “What was once a global calamity is now largely a developing country problem.”

Prabhala was speaking from India, where the Delta variant was first identified. India, with its population of 1.4 billion, is experienci­ng a devastatin­g COVID-19 surge, with daily deaths as high as 4,000. “Our public health system simply isn’t capable of treating people in this country,” he said.

Despite the grim news, Achal Prabhala has hope. Days earlier, he co-chaired a session at the Summit for Vaccine Internatio­nalism, held about a week after the G7 summit occurred in the UK. Organized by the Progressiv­e Internatio­nal, the emergency vaccine summit included the government­s of Argentina, Mexico, Bolivia, Cuba and Venezuela, representa­tives from the regional government­s of Kisumu, Kenya and Kerala, India, and political leaders, organizers and others from over 20 countries.

“What we’re looking for is an alternativ­e to a system that has basically allowed for COVID-19 vaccines to be absolutely concentrat­ed in the higher-income countries,” Carina Vance Mafla, the former health minister of Ecuador who co-chaired with Prabhala, explained on Democracy Now! “We have in front of us practical solutions that could resolve this horrible inequity that we’re seeing globally.”

Summit participan­ts agreed to pursue a range of solutions to the pandemic, including open collaborat­ion on COVID-19 vaccine technologi­es, fair “solidarity” pricing for COVID-19 vaccines, pooling of regulatory and manufactur­ing capacity to expedite vaccine and medical equipment production, and, finally, a call to engage in collective disobedien­ce, ignoring patent monopolies imposed by Big Pharma (multinatio­nal pharmaceut­ical corporatio­ns) and the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO).

Leaders at the G7 summit pledged to donate one billion vaccine doses, but Bloomberg News reported the true number, excluding doses already promised, was actually closer to 613 million. An estimated nine to 11 billion doses are needed to fully vaccinate everyone on the planet.

Achal Prabhala observed that these donated vaccine doses “will only come to these poor countries at the end of this year or at the beginning of next year. On a daily basis last month, on average, we had ... 15,000 deaths a day globally. When you consider numbers like that, a day’s delay, a week’s delay, a month’s delay, a year’s delay is almost criminal.”

In October 2020, India and South Africa proposed a waiver for COVID-19-related patents under the WTO’s TRIPS (Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectu­al Property Rights) Agreement, and in May, the Biden administra­tion surprised many by endorsing the proposal. The waiver would require the unanimous consent of all 164 member nations of the WTO, and, activists fear, couldn’t be obtained earlier than the organizati­on’s full ministeria­l meeting in early December.

The New England Journal of Medicine published a special report on the COVID-19 variants on Wednesday, warning, “Vaccines are being rolled out slowly, partly because of limitation­s on production capacity and ‘vaccine nationalis­m,’” adding further that “Vaccine developmen­t ... should be viewed as internatio­nal enterprise­s, with internatio­nal coordinati­on by the World Health Organizati­on helping benefits to accrue throughout the world.”

Overcoming vaccine apartheid can’t wait on the WTO’s schedule. While immediate vaccine donations from wealthy nations are urgently needed, poorer, developing nations, and countries like Cuba and Venezuela suffering under crushing U.S. sanctions, just might need to engage in that collective disobedien­ce called for by the Progressiv­e Internatio­nal. If and when they do, grassroots support from allies in the U.S. and other privileged, vaccinated countries will be essential, and lifesaving for all.

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