Cyprus Mail
World

G7 agrees 1 billion COVID vaccine donation – communique

g7 summit china cyprus
China leads all the G7 countries combined in the number of doses it has delivered to poorer countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America.

Group of Seven countries will provide 1 billion COVID-19 vaccine doses over the next year and work with the private sector, the G20 and other countries to increase the contribution over months to come, according to an almost finalised draft of the communique.

“The commitments since we last met in February 2021 including here in Carbis Bay provide for 1 billion doses over the next year,” said the communique, seen by Reuters.

“We will work together with the private sector, the G20 and other countries to increase this contribution over the months to come,” the communique said.

Two sources said the draft had been largely finalised by diplomats who worked late into Saturday night to agree most of the text, though they said parts of the draft could change over coming hours.

There were few disagreements over the communique, which is going through final drafting, though Japan pushed for a tougher line on China, a diplomatic source said.

The G7 said in the draft that the vaccine donations built on exports from domestic production with at least 700 million doses exported or to be exported this year, of which at least 50% have gone to non G7 countries.

The group added that it had “a commitment to continue exporting in significant proportions; and the promotion of voluntary licensing and not-for-profit global production, which has so far accounted for 95% of the COVAX supply,” the communique said.

The COVAX facility, backed by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI), aims to secure 2 billion vaccine doses for lower-income countries by the end of 2021.

“We reaffirm our support for all pillars of the ACT-A across treatments, tests and strengthening public health systems as well as vaccines,” the communique said.

The ACT-Accelerator partnership was designed to accelerate the design, production and distribution of vaccines.

“We support discussions regarding the extension of the ACT-A mandate into 2022, noting the planned comprehensive review to optimise its effectiveness and accountability.”

Related Posts

‘Hotel Rwanda’ hero Rusesabagina to be freed from Rwandan jail

Andria Kades

U.S. Treasury announces new sanctions on Belarusian entities, individuals

Reuters News Service

France’s Macron says will not yield to pension protests

Reuters News Service

Utah governor signs laws curbing social media use for minors

Reuters News Service

Indian opposition dealt blow as parliament bars Congress leader Gandhi

Reuters News Service

Russia: use of depleted uranium shells would harm population, land for decades

Reuters News Service