Message by UN Secretary-General António Guterres to the International Forum on COVID-19 Vaccine Cooperation文章源自英文巴士-https://www.en84.com/11965.html
文章源自英文巴士-https://www.en84.com/11965.html
5 August 2021文章源自英文巴士-https://www.en84.com/11965.html
文章源自英文巴士-https://www.en84.com/11965.html
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to devastate our world, claiming more than 4 million lives.文章源自英文巴士-https://www.en84.com/11965.html
文章源自英文巴士-https://www.en84.com/11965.html
The remarkable rapid development of COVID-19 vaccines offers great hope.文章源自英文巴士-https://www.en84.com/11965.html
文章源自英文巴士-https://www.en84.com/11965.html
But these vaccines need to reach everyone, everywhere as quickly as possible.文章源自英文巴士-https://www.en84.com/11965.html
文章源自英文巴士-https://www.en84.com/11965.html
This is a matter of fairness and justice – but it is also critical to avoid the emergence of further variants that can resist the current vaccines and undermine national vaccination efforts.
I welcome the agreements signed by Sinopharm and Sinovac with COVAX, unlocking potential supplies of over 500 million doses.
Overall, we need more than 11 billion doses to vaccinate 70 percent of the global population – a key threshold to ending the acute phase of this pandemic.
This will take the largest public health effort in history.
The world needs a Global Vaccine Plan to at least double production of vaccines and ensure equitable distribution, using COVAX as the platform. We also need an Emergency Task Force – at the G20 level – to coordinate its implementation.
The doubling of manufacturing capacity requires a much greater sharing of technology and know-how, strengthening and building local production capacities around the world and addressing supply chain bottlenecks.
This first meeting of the International Forum on COVID-19 Vaccine Cooperation is a critical opportunity to bring together countries with vaccine production capacities, pharmaceutical companies and manufacturers to advance global cooperation on vaccines.
I thank the Government of China for its leadership to address equitable access to vaccines for developing countries – the most pressing issue of our times.
Thank you.