The Arizona Republic

UN chief on virus: ‘We are at war ... and not winning’

- Aya Batrawy and Edith M. Lederer

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – The head of the United Nations told leaders of the world’s 20 major industrial­ized nations during an emergency virtual summit Thursday that “we are at war with a virus – and not winning it” despite dramatic measures by countries to seal their borders, shutter businesses and enforce home isolation for well over a quarter of the world’s population.

The unusual video call in lieu of a physical gathering comes as government­s around the world stress the importance of social distancing to curb the spread of the highly infectious virus, which has prompted closures, curfews and lockdowns globally.

The Group of 20 nations, criticized for not taking cohesive action against the virus or its economic impact, vowed to work together and said they are collective­ly injecting more than $4.8 trillion into the global economy to counteract the social and financial impacts of the pandemic.

In a final statement after the meeting, the G20 said they were committed to strengthen­ing the World Health Organizati­on’s mandate. They said “global action, solidarity and internatio­nal cooperatio­n” were needed more than ever, but made no specific commitment­s.

“The unpreceden­ted COVID-19 pandemic is a powerful reminder of our interconne­ctedness and vulnerabil­ities,” the group said. “The virus respects no borders.”

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged G20 leaders to adopt a wartime plan to tackle the pandemic.

“It took the world three months to reach 100,000 confirmed cases of infection,” he said. “The next 100,000 happened in just 12 days. The third took four days. The fourth, just one and a half.”

“This is exponentia­l growth and only the tip of the iceberg,” Guterres said, adding that countries must be able to combine systematic testing, tracing, quarantini­ng and treatment, as well as coordinate an exit strategy to keep it suppressed until a vaccine becomes available.

U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said that the secretary-general “thought the meeting was an important step in the right direction, but there’s still a long way to go for truly concerted and effective global leadership in response to this pandemic and its impact.”

The WHO’s director-general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, urged the G20 leaders to fight the epidemic without excuses, without regrets, thanking countries that have taken steps to fight the pandemic and urging them to do more. He also encouraged leaders to unite, saying no country can fight COVID-19 alone.

Saudi Arabia, which is presiding over the G20 this year, opened the meeting with an urgent appeal by King Salman for the world’s most powerful nations to finance the research and developmen­t of a vaccine for the virus.

“This human crisis requires a global response. The world counts on us to come together and cooperate in order to face this challenge,” the Saudi monarch said.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced during the call that the UK was providing additional funding to the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedne­ss Innovation­s, which is supporting the developmen­t of vaccines, bringing its contributi­on to $302 million.

The meeting was not open to the media and government­s and organizati­ons distribute­d the comments of participan­ts after it concluded.

In the video call, world leaders, such as India’s Narendra Modi, Japan’s Shinzo Abe and Canada’s Justin Trudeau, whose wife has contracted the virus, could be seen in little boxes on a screen seated at desks in photos shared on Twitter by European Council President Charles Michel.

President Donald Trump was shown seated at the end of a long conference table in Washington with other American officials in photos shared on social media by the Saudi Foreign Ministry.

The meeting also included Chinese President Xi Jinping and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who was taking part in the summit from her apartment in ,Berlin where she is in quarantine after a doctor who gave her a pneumonia vaccine had tested positive for the virus. Two tests on Merkel have come back negative, but she still needs more tests.

Russian President Vladimir Putin suggested setting up a special fund under the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund that would offer interest-free loans, and he emphasized the need to create “green corridors” for free movement of supplies and technologi­es intended to deal with the pandemic. He also proposed a moratorium on sanctions with regard to essential goods.

Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte, whose country has been hardest-hit in Europe by COVID-19, said the G20 must use all fiscal and monetary policy tools to safeguard economies, “and national responses must be coordinate­d, enhancing their effectiven­ess.”

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, whose country has also been hard hit, asked the G20 to work with the WHO and other organizati­ons to do “whatever it takes” to contain the pandemic. He asked for an “unpreceden­ted, robust and large scale” response.

The virtual summit additional­ly included leaders from the World Bank, Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on and others.

IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva asked G20 leaders for their backing to double the fund’s $50 billion emergency financing capacity. She said vulnerable households and businesses need targeted financial support to stay afloat and get back to work quickly.

“Otherwise it will take years to overcome the effects of widespread bankruptci­es and layoffs,” she warned. The IMF has said it stands “ready to deploy” all of its $1 trillion lending capacity, with nearly 80 countries currently requesting help.

Ethiopia’s government told G20 finance ministers in a call ahead of Thursday’s summit that Africa needs a $150 billion emergency financing package because of the impact of the virus.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States