Pope wants all the world’s people to be able to get the shot
ANDREA GERMANOS for Common Dreams
Amid
ongoing outrage over global vaccine inequity, Pope Francis on October 16 urged
pharmaceutical companies to "make a gesture of humanity" by lifting
intellectual property protections and sharing Covid-19 vaccine technology with
the world.(CNS photo/Holy See Press Office)
The
pope's remarks came during a video address to
the World Meeting of Popular Movements, a collection of grassroots groups, in
which he expressed his belief "that we are not condemned to repeat or to
build a future based on exclusion and inequality."
"In
the name of God," the pope said, "I ask all the great pharmaceutical
laboratories to release the patents. Make a gesture of humanity and allow every
country, every people, every human being to have access to the vaccines."
"There
are countries where only three or four percent of the inhabitants have been
vaccinated," he added.
Francis' appeal, first reported by Reuters, capped off a week in which governments at the World Trade Organization's intellectual property council still failed to agree on a proposal to lift the vaccine patent protections.
The
Biden administration has backed the waiver proposal, first put forth over a
year ago, but the United Kingdom and some wealthy European Union nations
continue to block it—opposition social justice campaigners attribute to Big Pharma lobbying.
"How
many more people must die from Covid-19 before [U.K. Prime Minister] Boris
Johnson gets out of the way and lets low- and middle-income countries produce
their own vaccines?" Tim Bierley, pharma campaigner at the U.K.-based
advocacy group Global Justice Now, said in a statement Thursday.
In
the U.S., President Joe Biden faced a call this week from a group of
congressional Democrats to take further action to make Moderna share its recipe
in light of the "huge sums of public funding from American taxpayers"
the company received to develop the vaccine.
Public
health advocates are also urging the U.S. to stop hoarding and wasting its vaccine stockpile and
instead share its surplus doses with COVAX, the global
vaccine sharing initiative.
According
to the latest update from Our World in Data, 47.4% of the world
population has received at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine. Just 2.7% of
people in low-income countries, however, have received at least a single dose.