World

Countries meet tomorrow for pandemic treaty talks

World Health Assembly’s special session to contemplate developing new accord on emergency preparedness

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 28 Nov 2021 9:30PM

Countries meet tomorrow for pandemic treaty talks
The World Health Assembly meeting to determine a direction towards global pandemic prevention and management is expected to conclude with a resolution on the way forward, with the desired outcome to be decided potentially as far off as 2024. – AFP pic, November 28, 2021

GENEVA – World nations gather tomorrow to thrash out whether to pursue a pandemic treaty setting out how to handle the next crisis – which experts fear is only a matter of time.

The three-day meeting at the World Health Organisation (WHO) in Geneva comes with the planet still besieged by Covid-19, nearly two years on from the first recorded cases.

The economic turmoil and millions of lives lost have triggered calls for new international defences strong enough to prevent a repeat disaster.

“We will have more pandemics in the future. The question is not if, but when,” Jaouad Mahjour, WHO assistant director-general for emergency preparedness, told reporters.

The World Health Assembly – WHO’s decision-making body comprising all 194 member states – is holding an unprecedented special session to consider developing a new accord on pandemic preparedness and response.

The meeting should conclude with a resolution on the way forward. The desired outcome – whether a treaty or another formulation – will come later down the line, potentially as far off as 2024.

But how far countries are prepared to go in agreeing to binding terms on getting ready for the next outbreak, and effective systems for stamping it out, remains uncertain.

Rapid regulations or tougher treaty?

The existing International Health Regulations were simply not designed to handle pandemics on the scale of Covid-19, or ensure equity and preparedness, said Mahjour. Indeed, the word “pandemic” does not even appear in the texts.

Though faster to enter into force, the scope for what can be done via regulations is far narrower than that for a treaty.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus wants a treaty to end the sorry cycle of “neglect and panic”.

“The ongoing chaos of this pandemic only underlines why the world needs an iron-clad global agreement to set the rules,” he said Wednesday.

The United States is thought to be less keen on talk of a treaty and more focused on agreeing to content with rapid impact.

However, more than 70 countries so far are backing a treaty, the health ministers of 32 of them said in a joint article.

The ministers – from nations including Britain, Chile, Germany, Italy, Kenya, South Korea, Spain, Thailand and Turkey – said a treaty is “the only substantial proposal” that could ensure a “rapid, joint, effective, and equitable global response” to future outbreaks.

“We cannot wait for the next crisis before we act,” they wrote.

Ensuring equitable access to vaccines, tests and treatments is a key special session issue for many African countries starved of tools to fight this pandemic.

“Whatever we do, we need a continued commitment at the highest political level in the future,” one European diplomat said, adding: “We need a legally-binding instrument to structure this... it’s too important.”

Steve Solomon, WHO chief legal officer, told reporters there was “good reason to believe” a collective way forward could be found.

‘Get on with it’

The Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response, convened to rake over the failings in tackling Covid-19, reported its findings and recommendations in May. It proposed establishing a WHO framework convention.

Under that treaty format, the bulk of it could be agreed upon quickly and elements can then be added to the framework over time.

“This is not something that needs to be debated endlessly. Please get on with it,” panel co-chair Helen Clark, former New Zealand prime minister, said last Monday.

Following the 74th World Health Assembly in May, a working group was set up to find common ground ahead of the special session. It is racing to finalise a draft resolution for the session to debate.

It is gearing towards proposing an inter-governmental negotiating body to start drafting and negotiating on the basis of the special session’s outcome.

Mahjour said recommendations up for debate fall broadly into four categories: equity; governance and leadership; financing, at national and international levels; and systems and tools to respond to global health crises.

“There is some urgency... because the world cannot afford to have another pandemic for which it is not prepared,” said Mahjour. – AFP, November 28, 2021

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