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World leaders pushed on Tuesday for a new international treaty to prepare for the next global pandemic — and avoid the unseemly scramble for vaccines hampering the Covid-19 response.
Leaders from 25 countries, the European Union and the World Health Organisation (WHO) sought to get the ground rules down in writing to streamline and speed up the reaction to future global outbreaks.
The treaty would aim to ensure that information, virus pathogens, technology to tackle the pandemic and products such as vaccines are shared swiftly and equitably among nations.
“The time to act is now. The world cannot afford to wait until the pandemic is over to start planning for the next one,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a virtual Press conference. Without an internationally-coordinated pandemic response plan, “we remain vulnerable”, he warned.
The call came in a joint article published in international newspapers on Tuesday, penned by leaders from five continents.
The signatories included Germany’s Angela Merkel, Britain’s Boris Johnson, France’s Emmanuel Macron, South Korea’s Moon Jae-in, South Africa’s Cyril Ramaphosa, Indonesia’s Joko Widodo and Chile’s Sebastian Pinera.
“Nations should work together towards a new international treaty for pandemic preparedness and response,” the article said.
“We must be better prepared to predict, prevent, detect, assess and effectively respond to pandemics in a highly coordinated fashion.
“We are, therefore, committed to ensuring universal and equitable access to safe, efficacious and affordable vaccines, medicines and diagnostics for this and future pandemics.”
Leaders from key world powers, including the United States, China, Russia and Japan are not among the signatories so far.
But Tedros said the mood music from Washington and Beijing was positive and insisted it was not a problem that they had not yet signed up.
Tedros hoped to have a resolution squared up in time for the World Health Assembly in May. The assembly is the WHO’s decision-making body, attended once a year by delegations from the UN health agency’s 194 member states.
The push to bolster common efforts comes as the planet struggles to combine forces to overcome the Covid-19 pandemic that has killed almost 2.8 million people worldwide and battered the global economy.
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