Viet Nam News

Virtual global COVID-19 summit yields $3 billion in new funding

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US President Joe Biden warned nations attending Thursday's virtual global summit on COVID-19 that there was "still so much left to do" to quell the pandemic, as more than US$3 billion in new funding was pledged.

The veteran Democrat may however be at pains to spearhead ambitious plans to vaccinate the world and stop the spread of the coronaviru­s, as Congress has so far refused to authorise billions of dollars in funding.

The United States crossed a grim milestone as the summit began, with the White House announcing that more than one million Americans have now died due to COVID-19, the pandemic's highest recorded death toll in the world.

In his remarks at the summit, Biden said that while progress had been made on global vaccinatio­ns and delivering medical equipment to countries in need, "there's still so much left to do. This pandemic isn't over."

"We all must do more. We must honour those we have lost by doing everything we can to prevent as many deaths as possible," the US leader said.

The White House announced that the summit had "garnered new financial commitment­s totalling more than $3 billion in new funding... above and beyond pledges made to date in 2022."

More than $2 billion of that total will go towards "immediate" COVID-19 response, while $962 million has been committed to a World Bank fund for pandemic preparedne­ss and global health security.

The United States pledged another $200 million to that fund, raising its contributi­on to $450 million.

"We want to prevent complacenc­y. The pandemic is not over," a senior US official said of Thursday's meeting, which follows a first global huddle last September.

So far, the worldwide COVID-19 death toll stands at more than six million people.

'Loud call' to Congress

Unlike last September, when Biden challenged partners to surge vaccines worldwide and get 70 percent of every country vaccinated by September of this year, the US government came to Thursday's session hobbled by an inability to secure even its own funding.

Biden has requested another $22.5 billion in emergency COVID money, including $5 billion for the administra­tion's signature internatio­nal program, which has seen some 500 million vaccine doses shipped to more than 100 countries.

After debate, a preliminar­y agreement was reached in the legislatur­e on spending just $10 billion, with nothing for the foreign vaccines.

"You will hear a loud call" to Congress, the US official said. "We know the virus is not waiting for Congress. So we need urgent, urgent action."

Opponents in Congress have been especially concerned about funding foreign vaccinatio­ns, but the senior official argued that when a new virus variant strikes, it is likely to start abroad before hitting the United States.

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