From the BBC:
“Coronavirus: Trump's WHO
de-funding 'as dangerous as it sounds'”
US President Donald Trump has
been heavily criticised for halting funding for the World Health Organization
(WHO) amid the global coronavirus pandemic. Philanthropist Bill Gates, a major
funder of the WHO, said it was "as dangerous as it sounds". President
Trump said on Tuesday that the body had "failed in its basic duty" in
its response to coronavirus. The head of the WHO said it was reviewing the
cuts' impact "to ensure our work continues uninterrupted". "We
regret the decision of the President of the United States to order a halt in
the funding to the WHO," Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said
at a press conference, adding that the US has been "a long-standing and
generous friend... and we hope it will continue to be so". Earlier on
Twitter he said it was the agency's "singular focus" was to stop the
outbreak. UN Secretary General António Guterres said it was "not the
time" to cut funds to the WHO, which "is absolutely critical to the
world's efforts to win the war against Covid-19".
The WHO row, explained: Mr Trump has accused the WHO of making
deadly mistakes and overly trusting China. "I am directing my administration to halt
funding while a review is conducted to assess the World Health Organization's
role in severely mismanaging and covering up the spread of the
coronavirus," Mr Trump told reporters on Tuesday. A White House statement
on Wednesday said the agency had "failed" the US people. "The
American people deserve better from the WHO, and no more funding will be
provided until its mismanagement, cover-ups and failures can be
investigated," it read. Mr Trump has been under fire for his own handling
of the pandemic. He has sought to deflect persistent criticism that he acted
too slowly to stop the virus's spread by pointing to his decision in late
January to place restrictions on travel from China. He has accused the WHO of
having "criticised" that decision, an apparent reference to general
advice from the agency against travel restrictions. The US is the global health body's largest
single funder and gave it more than $400m in 2019. The Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation, which is funding Covid-19 treatment and vaccine research, is the
second-largest funder. A decision on whether the US resumes funding will be
made after the review, which Mr Trump said would last 60 to 90 days.
In other reaction:
A spokesman for UK Prime Minister
Boris Johnson said there were "no plans" to halt funding and said the
WHO had "an important role to play in leading the global health
response". The UK gives most of any country apart from the US
Germany's foreign minister Heiko
Mass tweeted that strengthening the "under-funded" WHO was one of the
best investments that could be made at this time
Chinese foreign ministry
spokesman Zhao Lijian said that the decision would "undermine
international co-operation" in fighting the virus
The American Medical Association
said it was a "dangerous step in the wrong direction"
There was no justification for
the move at a time when the WHO was "needed more than ever", said the
EU's foreign policy chief Josep Borrell
Australian PM Scott Morrison said
he sympathised with Mr Trump's criticisms but that the WHO also does "a
lot of important work"
New Zealand leader Jacinda Ardern
said the WHO had provided "advice we can rely on"
The president was doing
"whatever it takes to deflect from the fact that his administration
mismanaged this crisis", said Democratic representative Eliot Engel
The decision was "exactly
right", said US Senator Josh Hawley, among many Republicans who share Mr
Trump's views on the WHO
What is Donald Trump's argument?: The US has by far the highest number of
coronavirus cases and deaths worldwide - with more than 600,000 cases and
26,000 deaths. Mr Trump accused the WHO
of having failed to adequately assess the outbreak when it first emerged in the
city of Wuhan, losing precious time. "Had the WHO done its job to get
medical experts into China to objectively assess the situation on the ground
and to call out China's lack of transparency, the outbreak could have been
contained at its source with very little death," he told reporters. "This
would have saved thousands of lives and avoided worldwide economic damage.
Instead, the WHO willingly took China's assurances to face value... and
defended the actions of the Chinese government."
What is the WHO - and who funds
it?: Founded in 1948 and based in
Geneva, Switzerland, it is the UN agency responsible for global public health Has
194 member states, and aims to "promote health, keep the world safe and
serve the vulnerable" Involved in vaccination campaigns, health emergencies
and supporting countries in primary care Funded by a combination of members' fees based
on wealth and population, and voluntary contributions US provided 15% of its
2018-19 budget - with more than $400m China gave about $86m in 2018-19 Chinese
officials initially covered up the outbreak of the virus in Wuhan, and punished
whistleblowers who tried to raise the alarm. Beijing later imposed draconian
restrictions, including quarantine zones on an unprecedented scale, drawing
effusive praise from the WHO and Mr Tedros. But WHO experts were only allowed
to visit China and investigate the outbreak on 10 February, by which time the
country had more than 40,000 cases. White
House reporters pointed out, however, that Mr Trump himself had praised China's
response to the outbreak and downplayed the danger of the virus at home long
after the WHO had declared a "public health emergency of international
concern".
Why has the WHO faced criticism?: It is not the first time the WHO's response
to the outbreak has come under scrutiny. On 14 January, the organisation tweeted that
preliminary Chinese investigations had found "no clear evidence of
human-to-human transmission" of the new virus. Mr Trump and others have
used the tweet to attack the WHO for simply believing China, despite evidence
to the contrary. But about a week after that tweet, on 22 January, the agency
released a public statement saying that human-to-human transmission did appear
to be taking place in Wuhan. At the end
of January, on the same day it declared a public health emergency, the WHO said
that travel restrictions were not needed to stop the spread of Covid-19 -
advice that was eventually ignored by most countries, including by the Trump
administration the next day. In March, the UN agency was also accused of being
unduly influenced by China after a senior official refused to discuss Taiwan's
response to the outbreak. Meanwhile, some health experts also say that the
WHO's guidance on face masks has led to public confusion. Other frequently-made
criticisms of the WHO more generally are that it is constrained by politics and
a sprawling bureaucracy. It came under particular fire for its response to the
2014-16 Ebola outbreak in West Africa and how long it took to declare a public
health emergency, leading the organisation to announce reforms in response.
^ While I do believe the WHO
failed to warn the world about the pandemic early on I don’t think the US
should stop funding it now. There should be an investigation into what the WHO
did and did not do and only after the investigation is finished and the
findings made known should any punishment
- like de-funding – be made. The WHO also needs to recognize every
country and territory in the world – like Taiwan – since healthcare, viruses,
pandemics, etc. knows no borders. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-52291654
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