HEALTH
UK wants whole world vaccinated by end of 2022 and will ‘send 100m jabs abroad’

Britain is calling for the whole world to be vaccinated by the end of 2022 with Boris Johnson to urge the G7 to “rise to the greatest challenge of the post-war era” and “defeat Covid”.

The Prime Minister will meet other world leaders in person in Cornwall on Friday.

Mr Johnson’s call comes after criticism that the UK has not yet sent any of its vaccine supply abroad despite our rollout having reached the most vulnerable and now progressed to young adults.

The Sunday Times reports that the UK is preparing to send 100 million doses to poor countries to help meet the global target.

The Prime Minister will also push for a global watch system to catch new variants before they can plunge countries back into lockdown.

Setting the scene before their gathering in Carbis Bay on June 11-13, Mr Johnson is calling on his counterparts to “rise to the greatest challenge of the post-war era” by “vaccinating the world by the end of next year”, in a move he said would be the single greatest feat in medical history.

a man and a woman holding a sign: Britain's own programme, which started last year, has now reached young adults but we still have not sent any doses abroad© Getty Images Britain’s own programme, which started last year, has now reached young adults but we still have not sent any doses abroad

It comes as Covid-19 cases have continued to surge in the UK amid reports the Prime Minister is considering delaying his target of lifting all restrictions in England on June 21 by at least two weeks in order to allow more people to be fully vaccinated.

Mr Johnson said: “I’m calling on my fellow G7 leaders to join us to end this terrible pandemic and pledge will we never allow the devastation wreaked by coronavirus to happen again.”

No 10 said the Prime Minister will tell his counterparts that the world’s biggest economies must lower barriers to the international distribution of vaccines and share surplus doses with developing countries bilaterally and through Covax, the United-Nations backed scheme aiming to supply low and medium income countries with jabs.

The Sunday Times reported that the Conservative Party leader is preparing to hand over 100 million vaccine doses to developing countries, donating £2 billion worth of jabs this year to the worldwide push to vaccinate every human against Covid-19.

Most of the jabs will be batches of Oxford/AstraZeneca, the newspaper said.

Jill Biden et al. standing in a park: Joe Biden will be among world leaders gathering in Cornwall this week© Shawn Thew / Pool via CNP / SplashNews.com Joe Biden will be among world leaders gathering in Cornwall this week

The UK pledged in February to give surplus doses to Covax but has yet to donate any of the 400 million it has on order, with Health Secretary Matt Hancock arguing that there are no excess jabs available given the NHS’s own vaccine programme is still in full swing.

That stance will come under even greater scrutiny later in the year when it is expected the vaccine will be rolled out to secondary school age children, despite the most vulnerable in some poor countries still not having had it.

According to the Sunday Telegraph, venture capitalist Kate Bingham, who as the former head of the vaccines taskforce helped lay the groundwork for Britain being able to order a range of successful vaccine types, will be rewarded for her unpaid efforts with a damehood.

A student receives a dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine at a vaccination centre at the Hunter Street Health Centre in London on June 5, 2021. - The UK government are set to decide on June 14 whether their plan to completely lift coronavirus restrictions will go ahead as scheduled on June 21 amid concern over rising infections. (Photo by DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS / AFP) (Photo by DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP via Getty Images)A student receives a dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine at a vaccination centre at the Hunter Street Health Centre in London on June 5, 2021. – The UK government are set to decide on June 14 whether their plan to completely lift coronavirus restrictions will go ahead as scheduled on June 21 amid concern over rising infections. (Photo by DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS / AFP) (Photo by DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP via Getty Images)

As part of the UK’s G7 presidency, officials said the Prime Minister will encourage support for a global pandemic radar, a surveillance system that will aim to detect vaccine-resistant variants before they have the chance to spread.

Downing Street argued that the UK had “led efforts to ensure the world’s poorest and most vulnerable people have access to vaccines”, referencing the part played by the Westminster Government in funding the Oxford/AstraZeneca jab.

With the jab made available at cost, No 10 said almost one in three shots administered around the world have been the Oxford vaccine, with 96% of the 80 million shots administered by Covax supplied by AstraZeneca.

Officials also highlighted the “significant financial contribution” of £548 million given to Covax in its early formation.

a group of people walking down the street: Younger people have queued for jabs at vaccine centres as the rollout gathers pace© AFP via Getty Images Younger people have queued for jabs at vaccine centres as the rollout gathers pace

G7 leaders will arrive in Cornwall’s Carbis Bay on Friday for three days of meetings, with a focus on how the group, which includes the US and Germany, can lead the global recovery from coronavirus, officials said.

During the sessions the leaders – including those from Canada, Japan, France and Italy – will be joined virtually by experts, including the UK’s chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance, philanthropist Melinda French Gates and environmentalist David Attenborough.

On Saturday, the G7 countries will be joined either in person or virtually by the leaders of Australia, South Africa, South Korea and India for discussions on health and climate change.

It comes as the experts warned against England fully unlocking in little over two weeks’ time due to growing concern that the Indian variant, also known as the Delta strain, is pushing cases up.

Of the 12,431 Indian variant cases so far confirmed in the UK, 10,797 are in England, 1,511 in Scotland, 97 in Wales and 26 in Northern Ireland.

Professor Stephen Reicher, a member of the Scientific Pandemic Insights Group on Behaviours (Spi-B) which advises the Government, said scrapping all Covid restrictions later this month would be “foolish” and a “major risk”.

A UK Government spokeswoman said “no decision” had been made on whether to ease all coronavirus restrictions on June 21.

Source: Mirror.co.uk

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