Thursday, November 21, 2024
HomeForeign NewsEmergency Vaccine Summit Needed To Help Africa – Ex-UK PM Brown

Emergency Vaccine Summit Needed To Help Africa – Ex-UK PM Brown

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

Former British prime minister Gordon Brown on Monday said U.S, British and Italian leaders must hold an emergency summit before the U.N General Assembly to end vaccine inequality.

Brown said the countries should try and send more shots to Africa and other low-income nations.

Brown, prime minister between 2007 and 2010, has been leading a push for richer countries to share more of the cost of vaccinating people in developing countries, many of which have low inoculation rates and rising cases.

See also  I Won’t Take Covid Vaccine, Kogi People Are Not Guinea pigs –Yahaya Bello

He appealed to U.S President Joe Biden, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi, chair of the Group of 20 wealthy nations, to hold the summit before September when world leaders will take part in the U. N’s General Assembly.

He called for the leaders to end the “stranglehold” on vaccines of rich nations with excess supply, and for them to help Africa and other low-income countries with finance and logistics.

See also  Nigeria Would Rather Have no Vaccine Than Bring Bad Ones -NPHCDA

“Their leadership can ensure finance to build African manufacturing capacity for the longer term and unblock the barriers to African purchases of vaccines now and over the next year,” Brown said in a statement.

“Only intervention at the highest level by Joe Biden, Boris Johnson and the current chair of the G20, Mario Draghi, at a global vaccine summit in the next month can end this vaccine inequality that shames the world.”

The leaders of the Group of Seven advanced economies, the United States, Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan agreed in June to provide 1 billion doses to poorer countries by the end of 2022.

See also  COVID-19: No Recorded Adverse Effect of AstraZeneca Vaccine in Nigeria – NPHCDA

However, Brown said most of those would not be delivered to Africa, where less than two per cent of people have been fully vaccinated, until 2023.

“The biggest threat we all face comes from COVID spreading and mutating uninhibited in poor unvaccinated.”

- Advertisement -

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisment -

Most Popular