From the CBC:
“WHO resolution to investigate
pandemic response wins unanimous support”
A resolution on the need to
investigate the global response to the coronavirus pandemic won endorsement at
the World Health Organization's annual ministerial meeting on Tuesday, after
Donald Trump again threatened to halt U.S. funding for the agency. None of the
WHO's 194 member states — which include the United States — raised objections
to the resolution brought by the European Union on behalf of more than 100
countries, including Australia, China and Japan. "Is the [World] Health
Assembly prepared to adopt the draft resolution as proposed? As I see no
requests for the floor, I take it that there is no objection and the resolution
is therefore adopted," said Keva Bain, the Bahamas ambassador who serves
as the assembly's president. Applause erupted from officials hosting the annual
gathering. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the WHO's director-general, thanked
"the many member states who have expressed their support and
solidarity" at the two-day annual ministerial assembly. He welcomed the EU
resolution, which calls for an independent evaluation of the international
response, "including, but not limited to, WHO's performance." "We
want accountability more than anyone," Tedros said. "We will continue
providing strategic leadership to co-ordinate the global response" to the
pandemic. He made no reference to a threat by U.S. President Donald Trump,
which was contained in Trump's letter to Tedros that the president tweeted
overnight. In the letter, Trump threatens to reconsider America's membership in
the international body, as well as to permanently halt funding for the WHO if
it did not commit to improvements within 30 days. Trump suspended U.S.
contributions to the WHO last month, accusing it of promoting China's
"disinformation" about the coronavirus outbreak, although WHO
officials denied the accusation and China said it was transparent and open.
Lancet points to factual error in
Trump letter: "If the WHO does not
commit to major substantive improvements within the next 30 days, I will make
my temporary freeze of United States funding to the WHO permanent and
reconsider our membership," said Trump. Earlier, Trump said the WHO had "done
a very sad job" in its handling of the virus and he would make a decision
soon on U.S. funding. In his letter, Trump said the only way forward for the
body was if it could demonstrate independence from China, adding that his
administration had already started reform discussions with Tedros. Trump
claimed in the letter that WHO ignored credible reports of the virus in
December, including in the medical journal The Lancet. In a statement, The
Lancet said Trump's letter was "factually incorrect," stressing it
published no report in December referring to any virus in China, and it
criticized the president over his threat. "The allegations levelled
against WHO in President Trump's letter are serious and damaging to efforts to
strengthen international co-operation to control this pandemic," the
editors wrote. "It is essential that any review of the global response is
based on a factually accurate account of what took place in December and
January."
Cut would affect other
disease-fighting efforts: On Monday, the
WHO said an independent review of the global virus response would begin as soon
as possible and it had received backing from China, in the spotlight as the
origin of the pandemic. China also pledged $2 billion US over the next two
years to help deal with COVID-19, especially in developing countries. "It
was so striking to see Xi Jinping seizing the opportunity to open up, with
broad [co-operation], and make a proposal for $2 billion, and say if ever there
is a vaccine, they will share it with everyone," a European diplomat told
Reuters. "It's exactly what we feared: the space liberated by Washington
will be taken up by China." Geneva-based WHO, a UN specialized agency, is
leading a global initiative to develop safe and effective vaccines, tests and
drugs to prevent, diagnose and treat COVID-19. More than 4.75 million people
are reported to have been infected globally and 314,414 have died, according to
a Reuters tally. The United States contributed more than $400 million US to the
WHO in 2019, or roughly 15 per cent of the organization's budget. And this
year, Washington has already paid the WHO about $58 million, senior Trump
administration officials said last month, half of what it is required to pay
for 2020 — known as an assessed contribution. The United States traditionally
provides several hundred million dollars annually in voluntary funding tied to
specific WHO programs like polio eradication, vaccine-preventable disease, HIV
and hepatitis, tuberculosis, and maternal, newborn, child and adolescent
health. It was not clear how much voluntary funding the United States had
already provided for WHO programs in 2020. Any decision going forward
ultimately depends on not just the president but U.S. Congress, which
appropriates funding for WHO. Barring Taiwan from WHO is a serious health
concern, Canada, U.S., and allies say While Washington did not block the
consensus adoption of the text of the EU resolution on Tuesday, it rejected
language about reproductive health care and intellectual property rights. In a
statement, the U.S. mission to Geneva said it "dissociates" from
paragraphs guaranteeing the rights of poor countries to waive intellectual
property rules to obtain medicines in an emergency, and guaranteeing
reproductive and sexual health care in the pandemic. "The United States
believes in legal protections for the unborn, and rejects any interpretation of
international human rights … to require any State Party to provide access to
abortion," it said in an "explanation of position." The language
on intellectual property, designed to ensure poor countries can have access to
medicine, sends "the wrong message to innovators who will be essential to
the solutions the whole world needs," it added.
^ It doesn’t seem like a good
thing when all 194 member countries agree to investigate the handling (or
mishandling) of Covid-19. I’m not sure why there was applause. If nothing else
the WHO has favored China and continues to favor China by refusing to allow
Taiwan to be a member. Health knows no borders or politics and yet the WHO, by
not letting Taiwan join, does. If this investigation does nothing else but
allows Taiwan to join then it was well worth it. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/who-trump-funding-1.5574930
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