WHO urges UK to pause COVID-19 vaccine campaign

WHO spokeswoman Margaret Harris (L) appealed to the UK to pause its vaccine campaign, Prime Minister Boris Johnson (C) said all adults in UK should be offered a first vaccine dose by autumn, while UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres (R) said governments had a responsibility to protect their people. (Reuters/File Photos)
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  • Spokeswoman: Choose fair global distribution, not聽鈥榲accine nationalism鈥�

LONDON: The UK should pause its vaccination campaign after vulnerable groups have received jabs to promote a fair global rollout, the World Health Organization (WHO) has said.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said all adults in the UK should be offered a first vaccine dose by autumn.

But the WHO said countries should look for 2 billion doses to be 鈥渇airly distributed鈥� worldwide by the end of the year.

WHO spokeswoman Margaret Harris appealed to the UK, saying 鈥測ou can wait鈥� because ensuring fair global distribution is 鈥渃learly morally the right thing to do.鈥� Many poorer countries have yet to begin their vaccination drives.

This week, Johnson said the UK was on track to reach its goal of vaccinating the most vulnerable parts of the population by Feb. 15.

In her appeal, Harris told the BBC: 鈥淲e鈥檙e asking countries, once you鈥檝e got those high-risk and healthcare worker groups, please ensure that the supply you鈥檝e got access to is provided for others. While that鈥檚 morally the right thing to do, it鈥檚 also economically the right thing to do.鈥�

She added: 鈥淭here鈥檝e been a number of very interesting analyses showing that just vaccinating your own country and then sitting there and saying 鈥榳e鈥檙e fine鈥� won鈥檛 work economically. That phrase 鈥榥o man is an island鈥� applies economically as well 鈥� Unless we get all societies working effectively once again, every society will be financially affected.鈥�

Directors of the WHO previously warned that 鈥渧accine nationalism鈥� could cost high-income countries $4.5 trillion, while a report by the International Chamber of Commerce Research Foundation found that the world economy could lose up to $9.2 trillion if poorer countries do not receive access to jabs.

One member of the UK government鈥檚 Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies, Jeremy Farrar, warned that vaccinating 鈥渁 lot of people in a few countries, leaving the virus unchecked in large parts of the world, will lead to more variants emerging.鈥�

He said countries with vaccine supply deals should donate some doses to the WHO Covax vaccine fund, which he claimed 鈥渨ould not take away from the national effort to protect the most vulnerable in society and healthcare workers.鈥�

The UK has so far helped to raise more than 拢730 million ($1 billion) for the Covax advance market commitment, to help deploy more than 1.3 billion vaccine doses to 92 developing countries this year.

In January, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said governments had a responsibility to protect their people, but 鈥渧accinationalism鈥� is self-defeating and will delay a global recovery.

鈥淪cience is succeeding, but solidarity is failing,鈥� he warned. 鈥淰accines are reaching high-income countries quickly, while the world鈥檚 poorest have none at all.鈥�