WHO wants a treaty to fight pandemics

After the announcement of the emergence of a new variant of the coronavirus, the WHO considered this Omicron mutant to be of concern.

The World Health Organization is now calling for a calm down. REUTERS - Denis Balibouse

Text by: RFI Follow

3 min

Fight against Covid-19, and already prevent the next health crisis.

Important discussions are taking place in Geneva.

The World Health Organization meets in special session to create a treaty on pandemics.

The WHO has also protested against the restrictions affecting southern Africa after its revelations on the Omicron variant.

Advertising

Read more

This is the second time in its history that the WHO has met in a special session, explains our correspondent in Geneva,

Jérémy Lanche

.

This comes in the middle of a wave of coronavirus contaminations in Europe, and only a few days after the revelation, by South African scientists, of the existence of the Omicron variant.

►Read also: "No reason to panic" in the face of the Omicron variant, according to Joe Biden

While more and more States are barricading themselves in the face of this new threat, the WHO calls on the contrary to leave the borders open, in particular with South Africa.

For the world organization, these measures are counterproductive.

If a country declares the emergence of a new variant on its soil, and that in response all the others put it aside, the risk in the future is that very few play the game of transparency. .

Moreover, these restrictions have not prevented the B1.1.529 variant from spreading, since it has already been identified on several continents of the world.

Muchas gracias #Chile Health Minister @DrEnriqueParis for your leadership on a # PandemicTreaty / accord at the #WHASpecial.

We welcome your support, including for strengthening and sustainable financing of @WHO.

We also discussed 🇨🇱's effective management of the # COVID19 response pic.twitter.com/0SGpdrqUTl

- Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus (@DrTedros) November 29, 2021

Faced with this threat of which we can still measure precisely neither the contagiousness nor the pathogenicity, for lack of perspective, the WHO pleads rather for a review of international agreements moving towards more cooperation.

This is precisely the meaning of the session.

►Read also: Give scientists time to analyze the Omicron phenomenon

First, there is the issue of access to vaccines: if the sharing is not fair, with protected countries on one side and states where the virus is circulating on the other, this first poses an ethical problem, and this is taking the risk of seeing new variants emerge.

WHO has been warning about this for months.

Omicron shows that the finding was the right one, notes 

Simon Rozé

, in charge of scientific questions at RFI.

On its own, the Omicron variant is therefore a plea for the creation of a treaty on pandemics, believes Tedros Ghebreyesus.

The boss of the WHO takes this as proof with this multiplication of unilateral border closures with southern Africa.

“ 

We have to thank South Africa and Botswana for sequencing and identifying the variant, not penalizing them,

” he says.

And Omicron demonstrates why we need a pandemic treaty.

Because the current system does not encourage states to alert others to the threats that will inevitably come their way. 

"

This is a historic moment for countries to agree on a common, binding approach to a common threat coming from our relationship with nature.

It won't solve every problem, but it will provide the framework to foster greater cooperation & strengthening 🌍 health security #WHASpecial pic.twitter.com/YjatVOE5lo

- Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus (@DrTedros) November 29, 2021

A treaty will not prevent national selfishness.

But for its supporters, it would have the merit of better coordinating the response and the sharing of information in the event of the emergence of a new infectious agent, with the automatic dispatch of experts in the field.

For the moment, we are still a long way off.

Because the consensus that seems to be emerging in Geneva in recent hours says nothing about the content of the future treaty.

The negotiations could last for months or even years.

With a possible entry into force which will not be scheduled before 2024.

►In the spotlight: Wind of global panic over the emergence of the new Omicron variant

Newsletter

Receive all international news directly in your mailbox

I subscribe

Follow all the international news by downloading the RFI application

google-play-badge_FR

  • WHO

  • Coronavirus

  • Africa