COVID-19 | Trump under fire for attacking WHO
The HinduApril 15,2020
From UN to EU and African Union, leaders slam U.S. President’s decision
to halt funding to agency
Global efforts to join forces against the coronavirus faltered Wednesday
after Donald Trump froze funding for the World Health Organization,
igniting a chorus of criticism from world leaders who urged solidarity in the
face of a crippling economic crisis.
The U.S. President’s shock move came as a patchwork of countries
experiment with loosening lockdown measures, ushering the planet into a new and
uncertain phase of a pandemic that has killed more than 1,25,000 people
worldwide and infected at least two million.
In Europe, Denmark became the first country on the badly-hit continent
to start reopening schools, while Finland lifted a travel blockade on
the Helsinki region.
Italy and Spain have also allowed some businesses to restart after signs
both are finally flattening the curve following weeks of punishing death tolls.
But as governments launch into delicate debates of how to jump-start
economies without triggering new waves of infection, Trump rattled efforts at
global solidarity by ramping up his blame-game with the WHO, the UN’s health
agency.
The President ordered the U.S. to freeze funding pending a review into
the WHO’s role in “severely mismanaging and covering up the spread of the
coronavirus”.
Trump charged that the outbreak could have been contained “with very
little death” if the WHO had accurately assessed the situation in China, where
the disease broke out late last year.
Leaders around the globe fired back at the U.S. President, who initially
downplayed the dangers of a virus that has now killed more people in the United
Sates than any other country.
“There is no time to waste,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said
on Twitter following Trump’s decision, adding that the organisation’s “singular
focus is on working to serve all people to save lives and stop the COVID-19
pandemic”.
Trump also earned a rebuke from UN chief Antonio Guterres and
billionaire Bill Gates, who tweeted that cutting funding was “as dangerous as
it sounds”.
Beijing, which has been the focus of Trump’s finger-pointing for weeks,
warned the move would “undermine the international cooperation” at a “critical
moment” in the pandemic.
The European Union’s foreign policy leader Josep Borrell was similarly
disapproving of a move he said lacked any justification, while African Union
chief Moussa Faki Mahamat condemned Trump’s decision as “deeply regrettable”.
The controversy erupted as the world is trying to soften the blow of a
looming economic catastrophe, which the International Monetary Fund has said
could see $9 trillion wiped from the global economy in the worst downturn since
the 1930s Great Depression.
Underlining the point, Europe’s powerhouse Germany has been in recession
since March, the government said Wednesday.
The virus-hit Chinese economy, second only to the U.S., probably
contracted for the first time in around three decades in the first quarter,
according to an AFP poll of economists.
Meanwhile finance ministers from the G20 — the world’s richest countries
— held virtual talks Wednesday about a possible debt moratorium for poor states
struggling to weather the costs of the pandemic.
European lockdowns easing
With tentative hope the pandemic could be past its peak in some European
hotspots, countries are gradually lifting restrictions — to mixed reception.
Children started returning to nurseries, kindergartens and primary
schools in parts of Denmark, where other measures, such as the closing of
borders, bars, restaurants remained in place.
Finland’s Prime Minister Sanna Marin also lifted a travel ban in the
Helsinki region even as she urged residents to continue avoiding movement,
saying “now is not the right time to go to the summer cottage”.
Italy, the first European country to enter a full lockdown, is allowing
bookshops, launderettes, stationers and children’s clothing retailers to
reopen.
And Spain, which saw another dip in its daily death toll, has permitted
work to start in some factories and construction sites, though most people
remain under strict stay-at-home measures.
Yet warnings abound that a real return to normal is still a long way
off.
Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said the confinement was working
but that “nothing will be the same until a vaccine is found”.
Germany was also expected to extend
its coronavirus restrictions to May 3, regional government sources said
Wednesday.
Harvard scientists, meanwhile, have warned it is unlikely that one-time
lockdowns will do the job, predicting that repeated periods of social
distancing could be needed into 2022 to avoid overwhelming hospitals.
‘Unenforceable and unsustainable’
Elsewhere, governments are struggling to enforce lockdowns in
impoverished regions where shutdowns are spreading hunger among the poorest.
As the virus appeared to be on the retreat in some parts of richer
Europe, it is slowly taking hold in Africa, which has seen 15,000 cases and 800
deaths continent-wide — with fears over growing hunger and possible social
unrest.
“You are condemning people to a choice between starving and getting
sick,” said Jakkie Cilliers at the Pretoria-based Institute for Security
Studies (ISS), warning that lockdowns were unsustainable across much of Africa.
“It’s not possible for 10 people living in a tin shack...to not go
outside for three weeks.”
A similar crisis is emerging in Ecuador, where hunger trumps fear of the
virus for residents in rundown areas of the badly affected city of Guayaquil.
“The police come with a whip to send people running, but how do you say
to a poor person ‘Stay home’ if you don’t have enough to eat?” said Carlos Valencia,
a 35-year-old teacher.
The city’s mayor has warned that overstretched medical facilities mean
many are dying without the chance to be tested — a reality that could be be
hiding the true extent of the carnage in many poorer places.
People are continuing to “collapse in their houses, in the hospitals,
all over the place,” said mayor Cynthia Viteri.
However, in parts of the world that saw early outbreaks, there were some
hopeful examples of life going on as normal.
Though they were required to wear face masks and gloves, South Koreans nevertheless headed to the polls Wednesday and
delivered a strong show of support for President Moon Jae-in, commending his
handling of the epidemic.
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