By RNZ News
It is essential for the health of people worldwide that a yet-to-be-discovered vaccine for covid-19 coronavirus is widely available, says former New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark says.
Clark told RNZ Morning Report there is growing concern that instead of vaccine being available globally it will become the monopoly of a very few wealthy countries and companies.
She has added her name to a letter from more than 140 prominent world leaders to health ministers at the World Health Assembly which is due to meet next week.
READ MORE: – Al Jazeera coronavirus live updates – Global death toll passes 300,000LISTEN: Helen Clark speaks on RNZ Morning Report
News agencies have reported that France said yesterday that the world’s nations would have equal access to any novel coronavirus vaccine developed by pharmaceuticals giant Sanofi, a day after the company’s chief executive suggested that Americans would likely be the first in line.
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“A vaccine against covid-19 should be a public good for the world,” French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said, adding that “equal access of all” was “non-negotiable”.
He was speaking after CEO Paul Hudson told Bloomberg News: “The US government has the right to the largest preorder because it’s invested in taking the risk.”
Hudson apologised today, saying it was vital that any coronavirus vaccine reach all regions.
‘Operation Warp Speed’
Al Jazeera reports today that the United States government plans to stockpile hundreds of millions of doses of vaccines that are under development to combat the novel coronavirus with a goal of having one or more vaccines ready to deploy by the end of the year as part of “Operation Warp Speed”, according to administration officials.
“We think we’re going to have a vaccine in the pretty near future,” President Donald Trump told a news conference.
“Why is this so important? Because the world’s leading virologists are telling us that without a vaccine we’ll never live normally again so there is such a compelling public health reason for getting this out to everyone everywhere.”
She wanted the profit principle for any vaccine eliminated and a wonderful precedent had been set by the inventor of the polio vaccine who said he never wanted a cent out of it.
A lot of countries were already funding development of the vaccines and with public money, such as the billions promised during an European Union virtual conference managed from Brussels recently, the intellectual property comes into the public domain, Clark said.
A global agreement was needed so that the health workforce and the vulnerable, including the elderly, would access the vaccine first.
“Ideally you would establish a mandatory patent pool under the leadership of WHO … governments of course can issue compulsory licences for the manufacture of drugs where there’s a compelling public health reason … there will need to be money mobilised from donors.
“…But basically this needs to be manufactured at scale so that it can be available at very low cost to everyone everywhere.”
She said there was a chance of achieving this because of a “nobody is safe till everyone is safe” attitude.
New Zealand had been very successful in containing the effects of Covid-19 but would now have to sit tight in its bubble until the rest of the world catches up.
- This article is republished by the Pacific Media Centre under a partnership agreement with RNZ.
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Article by AsiaPacificReport.nz