Pandemic agreement talks go to the wire

pandemic agreement talks go to the wire

The draft pandemic agreement contains an article on the health and care workforce

Hectic last-ditch talks aimed at striking a landmark global agreement on handling future pandemics rolled into the final day on Friday with a deal still up in the air.

Two years of work on drafting an international accord on pandemic prevention, preparedness and response are coming to the crunch, with just hours left to find a consensus.

In December 2021, the raw pain of Covid-19 — which killed millions, shredded economies and crippled health systems — motivated countries to seek a binding framework of commitments aimed at preventing another such disaster.

pandemic agreement talks go to the wire

The equitable distribution of pandemic-related products such as vaccines has been at the heart of the pandemic agreement negotiations

However, big differences quickly emerged on how to go about it — fractures which still had not been healed going into Friday.

World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus voiced optimism that the talks would prove successful and conclude an agreement ready to be formally adopted at the annual gathering of WHO member countries, which runs from May 27 to June 1.

pandemic agreement talks go to the wire

Shaken by Covid-19, countries decided to build a framework of binding commitments to stop such trauma from happening again

“I am encouraged that all 194 member states are strongly committed to finalising the agreement in time for the World Health Assembly,” he said on Wednesday.

“They are working long hours to find common ground, in good faith, for the people of the world.”

– Rush to the finish line –

Fuelled by trolleys full of coffee, bananas, biscuits and sandwiches, negotiators have been pulling 12-hour days since April 29 to try and find a way through.

pandemic agreement talks go to the wire

The National Covid Memorial Wall in London is dedicated to those who lost their lives to Covid-19

The additional fortnight of talks — the process was meant to finish in March — are being held behind closed doors at the WHO headquarters in Geneva.

Those non-governmental organisations deemed relevant stakeholders can follow the process outside the room and are briefed daily by the talks’ co-chairs.

Such NGOs fear that any agreement concluded on Friday would be rushed, may not change the status quo, and may even entrench some of the weaknesses exposed by the Covid-19 pandemic.

While finding consensus on every article in the draft agreement would be unlikely, countries have nonetheless invested a lot of time in the process and want something to show for their efforts.

“We are telling them: don’t be under pressure to surrender on equity because you need to deliver an instrument,” said K. M. Gopakumar, senior researcher with the Third World Network NGO.

“We are afraid that will lead to a situation where they will be asked to compromise just to create a photo-op” to show that the treaty has been adopted.

“That would be a betrayal of people’s aspirations and people’s right to health.”

– Vaccine sharing –

The draft text proposed giving the WHO real-time access to 20 percent of the production of pandemic-related health products, such as vaccines.

While some countries want this changed to at least 20 percent, some Western powers are pushing for it to be up to 20 percent.

Each of the draft agreement’s 37 articles is being thrashed out in turn, with country negotiators breaking off into working groups to try to figure out a consensus.

Pedro Villardi, health equity coordinator for Public Services International, said front-line healthcare staff needed to be properly protected in the agreement, which should reflect their burden of exposure to risk.

Otherwise, “the workers that we represent as PSI, their lives are still going to be on the line” in the next pandemic, he said.

Villardi said the effort required to get a reference in the agreement to the mental health toll on front-line workers was “just unbelievable, it’s outrageous”.

– Fault lines –

The main disputes revolve around access and equity: access to pathogens detected within countries and to pandemic-fighting products such as vaccines produced from that knowledge; and equitable distribution of not only counter-pandemic tests, treatments and jabs, but also the means to produce them.

Speaking from South Africa, Lauren Paremoer of the People’s Health Movement, a senior lecturer at the University of Cape Town, told reporters that Africa had been “heavily marginalised” during the last pandemic, in terms of access to vaccines and other medical products.

“The treaty as it stands will not correct any of that,” she said, noting that much of the language on technology transfer to developing countries was non-binding.

“The treaty places new and very onerous (pathogen) surveillance obligations on African countries with absolutely no clear promise that funding will be made available,” she said.

rjm/bc/smw

OTHER NEWS

10 minutes ago

The Side Hustle He Started at Age 15 Led to a $4 Billion Boon for Small Businesses: 'They Would Take a Chance on Me With Their Hard-Earned Money'

10 minutes ago

The Equalizer: Season 4 Episode 10 – Review/ Recap

10 minutes ago

Google Chrome for iOS might soon gain Circle to Search feature

10 minutes ago

First Look: ‘Reasonable Doubt’ Set to Return For Season 2 on HULU

10 minutes ago

Follow These Tips to to Grow a Beautiful Wildflower Garden in Your Backyard

10 minutes ago

Warren Buffett's sister uses this simple method for passive income without dividends

10 minutes ago

Young rappers rack up tens of thousands of views since the weekend

10 minutes ago

Funding boycotts are ‘irresponsible, entitled and childish’

10 minutes ago

‘My father died from infected blood. Rishi Sunak’s apology is too little, too late’

10 minutes ago

Norton Motorcycles: Losses continue to mount at iconic brand

12 minutes ago

Austin enacts sweeping reforms to cut down housing costs

12 minutes ago

Houston-area storm recovery: Latest school closures, power outages and how to get help

12 minutes ago

Supreme Court Justice Alito sold Bud Light owner's stock amid boycott

15 minutes ago

Kaizer Chiefs: FIVE players to leave the club end of the season

15 minutes ago

‘The Other Way Around' Review: A Fun, Feisty, Anti-Romantic Comedy That Hollywood Should Learn from

15 minutes ago

Wealth Enhancement Group's Ayako Yoshioka: We still like having exposure to tech

15 minutes ago

Gold earring found in burned ruins of an Iron Age village may reveal ‘moment in time,’ archaeologists say

15 minutes ago

Clever Bathroom Renovation Tips Joanna Gaines Swears By

16 minutes ago

Carlos Rodon showing he finally feels at home with Yankees

16 minutes ago

Try Martha Stewart's Easy Decor Hack For Chic Home Office Storage

16 minutes ago

Rishi Sunak apologises to infected blood victims: 'day of shame for the British state'

16 minutes ago

Dasha On the Success of Hit Song "Austin," Teases 'What Happens Now' Deluxe Version & More | Country Power Players 2024

16 minutes ago

Injured Chelsea midfielder Enzo Fernandez named in provisional Argentina squad for Copa America

16 minutes ago

Northern Lights Could Return Tonight as Solar Storm Charges Aurora Borealis

16 minutes ago

Assisted dying in France: The ultimate freedom?

16 minutes ago

Biden White House stays unusually quiet on the death of Iranian president and foreign minister

16 minutes ago

Chris & Morgane Stapleton Talk Working With Dua Lipa & Wanting To Work With Harry Styles & Paul McCartney | ACM Awards 2024

16 minutes ago

Browns Offseason Grade: Jerry Jeudy Trade Not a 'Splash' Move?

16 minutes ago

'Constantly learning' Imanaga off to impressive start with the Chicago Cubs

16 minutes ago

Messi leads Argentina's squad for pre-Copa America friendlies

17 minutes ago

Andy Murray on course for defeat in Geneva before weather intervenes

17 minutes ago

Senate report finds parts made with China's forced labor in cars by BMW, Jaguar Land Rover and VW

17 minutes ago

Star golfer Scottie Scheffler's arraignment postponed after arrest during PGA Championship

18 minutes ago

Fired X-Men '97 Creator Beau DeMayo's Season 2 Involvement Might Worry Fans

18 minutes ago

President Widodo of nickel-rich Indonesia pitches EV battery plant plan to Elon Musk

18 minutes ago

General Staff: Ukraine fights off Russian attack near Starytsia village in Kharkiv Oblast

18 minutes ago

Colorado Governor Signs One Of The First US Bills To Regulate AI And Prevent Algorithmic Discrimination

18 minutes ago

‘It’s next man up’ for Vancouver Canucks heading into Game 7 without Brock Boeser

22 minutes ago

Ofcom investigating Eamonn Holmes’ GB News show as Arlene Foster accuses regulator of ‘shutting down free speech’

22 minutes ago

EQT CEO Toby Rice on the state of natural gas market

Kênh khám phá trải nghiệm của giới trẻ, thế giới du lịch