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Comment COVID Omicron: The case for vaccine justice

01 December 2021 / Graham Checkley
By Graham Checkley

Britain is one of the main countries to have blocked the global dropping of patents for coronavirus vaccines. If there is a major outbreak of the new Omicron variant in Britain, it will be directly due to the racist and profiteering policy of the Tory government, writes rs21 member Graham Checkley.

 

Botswana 20% fully vaccinated, Eswatini 21%, Lesotho 27%, Namibia 12%, South Africa 24%, Zimbabwe 19%. These are the 6 countries now on the travel red list due to the new COVID variant.

World map showing Covid-19 vaccine doses administered per 100 people. Showing Africa and the middle east as severely less vaccinated than most other countries.

The lower the level of vaccination, the more cases, the more chance of a new variant.

While Sajid Javid has been swift in thanking the South African government ‘not only for their rigorous scientific response but the openness and transparency with which they have acted’, he is also part of a government that has blocked vaccine justice at every turn.

As a result we now all reap what the UK government has sown.

As early as October 2020, India and South Africa were proposing that the World Trade Organisation temporarily suspend patent rights for COVID-19 vaccines. In October 2021, coffins were carried in Whitehall in symbolic protest against the continuing UK opposition to the waiver, and the estimated 10,000 deaths a day that this is causing.

The new variant is another bitter fruit of that policy.

World map shows which countries are on track to have vaccinated 40% of their population with at least one dose by the end of 2021. Almost all countries are on track or have done already, except in Africa where almost no countries are..

Closer to home we have seen a vaccine justice motion raised by Sarah Boyack in the Scottish Parliament and supported by 55 MSPs, but still an odd silence by the Scottish Government on the subject.

Whatever happens next, the public health measures remain the same. The way to stop new variants is to contain transmission, the Zero Covid approach.

Republished from RS21

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