World leaders at G-20 summit want fair access for COVID vaccine

Edited by Ed Newman
2020-11-23 00:11:50

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Some of the leaders of G-20 are seen on a screen before the start of the virtual meeting, hosted by Saudi Arabia, in Brussels.  (Photo: Reuters)

Brussels, November 23 (RHC)-- Leaders of the 20 biggest economies have pledged to pay for a fair distribution of coronavirus vaccines, drugs and tests around the world, amid global concerns that the pandemic would further deepen divisions between the rich and the poor across the world.

The leaders attending the two-day virtual summit, hosted by Saudi Arabia on Saturday, said they need to make sure that that poorer countries are not left out, vowing to extend debt relief to them.  “We will spare no effort to ensure their affordable and equitable access for all people, consistent with members’ commitments to incentivize innovation,” the leaders said in a draft G-20 communique.  “We recognize the role of extensive immunization as a global public good,” read the draft.

Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz said in his opening remarks that they need to “work to create the conditions for affordable and equitable access to these tools for all peoples.”

French President Emmanuel Macron said for his part that the world economies “need to avoid at all costs a scenario of a two-speed world where only the richer can protect themselves against the virus and restart normal lives.”

The European Union (EU), meanwhile, urged G-20 leaders quickly to put more money into a global project for vaccines, tests and therapeutics.  “At the G-20 Summit I called for $4.5 billion to be invested in ACT Accelerator by the end of 2020, for procurement & delivery of COVID-19 tests, treatments and vaccines everywhere,” European Commission head Ursula von der Leyen said on Twitter.  “We need to show global solidarity,” she said.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel told the summit that Berlin was contributing more than 500 million euros ($592.65 million) to the effort, according to a text of her remarks.  Merkel also urged other countries to do their part.

Russia, which has approved a coronavirus vaccine in August, vowed to provide it to other countries.  President Vladimir Putin told the summit that Moscow was ready to distribute its Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine to other nations.  Russia said earlier this month that the vaccine had a 92% effectiveness rate at preventing the coronavirus.

President Xi Jinping told the gathering that Beijing “is willing to strengthen cooperation with other countries in the research and development, production, and distribution of vaccines.”  “We will fulfill our commitments, offer help and support to other developing countries, and work hard to make vaccines a public good that citizens of all countries can use and can afford,” he said.  i also called for better international coordination on policies to facilitate the movement of people.

He said China would propose the creation of a mechanism by which travelers’ coronavirus test results were recognized internationally through digital health codes.

U.S. President Donald Trump, who was also attending the summit, did not participate in a session on global response efforts to the pandemic preparedness.  He has once again turned his back on the global coalition fighting the disease, saying that he wants to “Vaccinate America first!”  The U.S. president told the G-20 leaders that he wants American people to be the first to receive vaccinations against the coronavirus.

He claimed that two vaccines, made by Moderna and a partnership between BioNTech and Pfizer, were the work of U.S. companies.  BioNTech, however, is a German company, which retains ownership of the scientific technology that the vaccine is based upon.


 



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