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WHO chief warns pandemic accord hangs in the balance

The head of the World Health Organization
voiced fears Monday that countries will fail to strike a pandemic
preparedness agreement by May, saying “future generations may not forgive
us”.

Shaken by the Covid-19 pandemic, the WHO’s 194 member states are negotiating
an international accord aimed at ensuring countries are better equipped to
deal with the next health catastrophe, or to prevent it altogether.

The plan was to seal the agreement at the 2024 annual meeting of the World
Health Assembly, the WHO’s decision-making body, which convenes on May 27.

But WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said time was running out — and if
nobody is prepared to budge, the whole project risks going nowhere.

At the opening of the WHO’s executive board meeting in Geneva, Tedros
reminded countries that world leaders at the UN General Assembly had agreed a
commitment to resolve negotiations on the pandemic accord, and amendments to
the International Health Regulations (IHR), by May this year.

“I must say I’m concerned that member states may not meet that commitment.
Time is very short. And there are several outstanding issues that remain to
be resolved,” Tedros said.

Failure to deliver the agreement would be “a missed opportunity for which
future generations may not forgive us,” he said.

“It will take courage and it will take compromise.

“I urge all member states to work with urgency and purpose to reach consensus
on a strong agreement that will help to protect our children and
grandchildren from future pandemics.”

WHO member states decided in December 2021 to launch the negotiating and
drafting process for a new international instrument on pandemic prevention,
preparedness and response.

The accord would aim to ensure better global preparedness and a more
equitable response for future pandemics.

Tedros declared an end to Covid-19 as an international public health
emergency in May 2023.

The WHO’s governance is split between director-general Tedros, the World
Health Assembly and the executive board. (BSS/AFP)

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