From the BBC:
“Covid: Call for rich nations
to airlift millions of surplus vaccines”
More than 160 former world
leaders and global figures have called on the UK and other rich countries to
immediately airlift millions of surplus Covid vaccines to less developed
nations. They say it would be unethical for doses to be wasted while thousands
are dying with the virus every day. The call comes in a letter, organised by
former prime minister Gordon Brown. It is addressed to Italian PM Mario Draghi,
who is hosting the G20 group of major economies in Rome this weekend. Mr Brown
told BBC Breakfast: "Countries have over-ordered and they're over-stocked
and they're not giving the vaccines out quickly enough so a lot of vaccines
could be wasted past their expiry date."
The letter's signatories include
36 former presidents, 30 ex-prime ministers and another 100 influential global
figures. Among them is the former UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, former New
Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark and former Brazilian President Fernando
Cardoso. While more than six billion Covid vaccine doses have been administered
worldwide, they say 70% of these were administered by only a few countries and
just 2% of people in low-income countries have received a jab.
The letter says that between them
the US, EU, UK and Canada will have 240 million unused vaccines by the end of
this month, which could be airlifted immediately to countries most in need. Millions
more vaccines should be transferred each month, totalling 1.1 billion in the
next four months, it adds.
If this is achieved, it says the
World Health Organization's target for 70% of all adults to be vaccinated by
spring next year can be met. "Without a detailed plan, 100 million vaccine
doses will have passed their use-by date at the end of the year," the
letter says. "If we do not act quickly, that figure could exceed 200
million by the end of January 2022."
The UK has pledged to donate more
than 100 million doses over the next year, while the US has pledged 500 million
doses. In total, the G7 group of nations promised to donate more than 870
million doses at a summit in the UK in June. The vaccines will mainly be
delivered through the Covax vaccine scheme, which aims to reach the most
vulnerable 20% of every nation around the world. Meanwhile, the president of
Indonesia, where around 30% of the population are fully vaccinated, has also
urged richer countries to share their doses. "Everyone has helped, but in
my opinion it's not enough," Joko Widodo told the BBC. "In this time
of crisis, advanced countries need to do more in helping poor countries get
vaccines, so that we can overcome this pandemic together."
^ No Covid Vaccine should be
wasted and if need-be should be sent to other countries that will use them. ^
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