COVID-19: UN launches new campaign, Only Together, to support global vaccine equity call

COVID-19: UN launches new campaign, Only Together, to support global vaccine equity call

- The United Nations (UN) is making COVID-19 vaccines are accessible in all countries globally

- The organisation stated that vaccines play an important role in protecting people from the virus

- The UN urged world leaders to provide enough funding and to ramp up the manufacturing of vaccines

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The United Nations (UN) has launched a new global campaign, Only Together, to support its call for fair and equitable access to COVID-19 vaccines around the world.

UN in a statement sent to Legit.ng disclosed that the campaign stresses the need for coordinated global action to ensure vaccines are accessible in all countries, starting with health-care workers and the most vulnerable.

UN launches new campaign, Only Together, to support global vaccine equity call
The UN said the livelihoods of millions of people have been affected by COVID-19. Photo: Amina J Mohammed
Source: Facebook

Speaking about the campaign, the UN deputy secretary-general, Amina J. Mohammed said:

"Over the past year, we’ve all missed out on doing the things we love to do with others—eating, hugging, and going to school and work.''

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“Millions of us have lost someone we love or had our livelihoods taken away. An unprecedented global scientific effort for vaccines has given us hope to defeat the virus — but only if we work together to ensure everyone, everywhere has access to COVID-19 vaccines. Only together can we end the pandemic and transform a new era of hope.”

More than 2.5 million people around the world have died from COVID-19, according to the World Health Organization. The COVID-19 vaccines will stop people from dying, prevent new variants from emerging, reignite economies and offer the best hope to end the pandemic.

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The biggest vaccine rollout in history is now underway with millions of doses being delivered around the world, including to some of the world’s poorest countries, through the efforts of COVAX, the global vaccine equity mechanism.

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But these doses will initially only cover a small segment of the populations — healthcare workers and the most vulnerable. By the end of 2021, COVAX aims to offer vaccines to nearly 30% of each participating country’s population.

But that progress pales compared to ten rich countries who possess nearly 80 per cent of all COVID-19 vaccines, with some planning to vaccinate their entire population within the next few months.

COVAX, which is led by the World Health Organization, GAVI and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), and in partnership with UNICEF, has 190 participating countries. It needs more than US$2 billion to fully meet its goal to vaccinate those most in need by the end of the year.

Pledging new funding for COVAX is critical, but more can be done to scale up vaccine access by sharing excess vaccines, transferring technology, offering voluntary licensing or even waiving intellectual property rights.

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According to UN Under-Secretary-General for Global Communications Melissa Fleming:

“If the world’s scientists were able to develop safe and effective vaccines in just seven months, the aims of world’s leaders must be equally record-breaking — to provide enough funding and to ramp up manufacturing to enable everyone on earth to be vaccinated.''

Meanwhile, Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu on Tuesday, March 9, announced that the Lagos state government has received the first batch of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine.

Sanwo-Olu revealed the welcome development on his Twitter page on Tuesday, adding that the much-awaited vaccine arrived in the state on Tuesday.

The governor disclosed that the doses of the vaccine allocated to the state came from the federal government provided by COVAX.

Source: Legit.ng

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