{"id":16670,"date":"2021-02-01T15:12:18","date_gmt":"2021-02-01T15:12:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.radiofree.org\/?p=157105"},"modified":"2021-02-01T15:12:18","modified_gmt":"2021-02-01T15:12:18","slug":"under-the-current-rules-vaccines-are-only-going-to-rich-countries-that-can-afford-it","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2021\/02\/01\/under-the-current-rules-vaccines-are-only-going-to-rich-countries-that-can-afford-it\/","title":{"rendered":"Under the Current Rules, Vaccines Are Only Going To Rich Countries That Can Afford It"},"content":{"rendered":"
In October 2020, diplomats from South Africa and India approached the World Trade Organisation (WTO) with a revolutionary proposal.<\/p>\n
Together, the two countries argued that countries should be allowed to ignore any patents related to Covid-19 vaccines, for the duration of the pandemic. In other words: everyone should be allowed to manufacture the vaccine, without penalty.<\/p>\n
In their official communication, the countries said: \u201cAs new diagnostics, therapeutics and vaccines for Covid-19 are developed, there are significant concerns [about] how these will be made available promptly, in sufficient quantities and at affordable prices to meet global demand.\u201d<\/p>\n
Just a few weeks later, Pfizer and BioNTech announced the first successful phase three trials for a Covid-19 vaccine, followed swiftly by Moderna and AstraZeneca.<\/p>\n
In developing countries, jubilation at the prospect of a swift end to the devastating pandemic turned quickly into fear and anger, as it became clear that vaccines would only be made available to the rich, with little thought to equitable distribution. Canada, the worst offender, has pre-ordered so many vaccines that it will be able to vaccinate each of its citizens six times over. In the UK and US, it is four vaccines per person; and two each in the EU and Australia.<\/p>\n
The vaccines that have been made available to the developing world are either untested \u2014 such as the Chinese and Russian vaccines, for which insufficient clinical trial data has been released \u2014 or expensive. South Africa has ordered 1.5-million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine, but will pay more than double<\/a> what the EU is paying per dose.<\/p>\n The EU says that it is entitled to a lower price because it invested in the vaccine\u2019s development \u2014 nevermind that the AstraZeneca vaccine was literally tested on the bodies of South Africans<\/a> who volunteered to be part of the clinical trial in Johannesburg.<\/p>\n In lower income countries, the situation is even worse. As of 18 January, 39-million vaccine doses had been administered in the world\u2019s 50 richest countries, compared to just 25 individual doses in low-income countries.<\/p>\n It appears that South Africa and India were right. Under the current rules, the vaccine cannot be made quickly or cheaply enough to meet global demand, which vaccines are only going to those countries that can afford it. This is a \u201ccatastrophic moral failure\u201d, said the head of the World Health Organisation (WHO), Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. Some activists have described the situation as a “vaccine apartheid.”<\/p>\n “Nor has South Africa and India\u2019s proposal received support from the most influential non-state actor in global public health: Bill Gates.”<\/span><\/p>\n Nonetheless, the proposal for a patent waiver has been repeatedly rejected<\/a> at the WTO by wealthier countries including the European Union, the United Kingdom, US and Switzerland; countries which, as Reuters wryly noted<\/a>, are \u201call home to major pharmaceutical companies.\u201d They also all enjoy early access to the vaccine.<\/p>\n Nor has South Africa and India\u2019s proposal received support from the most influential non-state actor in global public health: Bill Gates.<\/p>\n The pandemic has been good to Gates. In 2020, the Microsoft cofounder added $18-billion <\/a>to his fortune, which now stands at a cool $131-billion (the annual GDP of Ethiopia, a country of 112-million people, is $96-billion). He is the fourth-richest person in the world.<\/p>\n