Countries have failed to
agree on one of the most controversial lessons from Covid-19 ¾ whether nations that share deadly virus
samples should be guaranteed vaccines, medicines and technology in return.
The negotiations, which
would have ended last week, will continue with the outcome expected next year,
the World Health Organization said.
The talks focused on the
Pathogen Access and Benefit-Sharing system (PABS). The system is expected to
determine how countries share dangerous virus samples and genetic sequencing
data and what they receive in return when vaccines, diagnostics and treatments
are developed from them.
The issue has become
highly sensitive for African countries, including Kenya, after the continent
was largely locked out of Covid-19 vaccines, despite rapidly sharing critical
scientific data during the pandemic.
Enjoying this article?
Subscribe for unlimited access to premium sports coverage.
The WHO, which hosted
the talks in Geneva, said in a statement that member states had made progress
but needed more time to finalise the annex.
The outcome is expected
to be presented either at the next World Health Assembly in 2027 or earlier
through a special session later this year.
“Real progress was made
on the PABS annex, and I am confident that through continued negotiations,
differences will be overcome,” WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus
said.
“Member states should
continue approaching the outstanding issues with a sense of urgency because the
next pandemic is a matter of when, not if,” he said.
“The PABS annex is the
last piece of the puzzle not only for the Pandemic Agreement but all initiatives
that WHO and member states have implemented as a result of lessons learned from
the Covid-19 pandemic.”
The PABS system is one
of the most contested sections of the WHO Pandemic Agreement, which countries
adopted last year after years of negotiations following Covid-19.
Under the proposed
system, countries would quickly share pathogen samples and genetic data during
outbreaks. In return, countries providing the samples would expect fair access
to vaccines, treatments, tests, technology transfer and possibly financial
benefits.
African countries argue
that during Covid-19, rich nations benefited from African scientific
cooperation without sharing vaccines fairly.
Two weeks ago, Kenyan
civil society groups had warned governments not to approve a weak agreement
that could repeat the inequalities seen during Covid-19.
Aggrey Aluso, executive
director of the Resilience Action Network Africa, said African countries hold
important bargaining power because many diseases with pandemic potential
originate on the continent.
“Most diseases with
pandemic potential, Ebola, Marburg, Lassa fever, and Mpox, are endemic in
Africa, not in Europe or the United States. Yet Europe and the US hold
stockpiles of Mpox vaccines. Africa does not. Where did they get the genetic
sequencing data? From Africa. Free of charge,” Aluso said.
“This is not a
negotiation about charity,” he said. It is about one of the most strategic
resources in 21st Century public health and every country has something to
offer for a robust PABS.”
“A good agreement is
possible, and we have all the right propositions on the table. All actors have
to act in good faith,” he said.
According to BMJ Global
Health, Africa received less than three per cent of Covid-19 vaccines, despite
accounting for about 17 per cent of the world’s population.
This history has made
African negotiators push for legally binding benefit-sharing rules instead of
voluntary promises.
The negotiations stalled
partly because many developing countries want strong, enforceable obligations
requiring pharmaceutical companies and wealthy nations to share vaccines and
technology during emergencies.
Several high-income
countries, especially in Europe, are reportedly uncomfortable with mandatory
obligations and prefer voluntary arrangements instead.
“The last pandemic
was not a failure of science — it was a failure of solidarity,” Dan Owala of
the People’s Health Movement Kenya said.
“Vaccines existed,
treatments existed, but access was rationed by geography and wealth.”
“If the PABS Annex is
stripped of binding contracts and traceable obligations, we will have to
rebuild the same architecture that failed our people the first time. Solidarity
written in pencil is not solidarity at all.”
The outcome of the talks
is especially important for Kenya, which is trying to grow its local
pharmaceutical and vaccine manufacturing industry.
The Ministry of Health’s
Local Manufacturing Strategy 2025-30 aims to produce half of Kenya’s essential
medicines locally, although the country still imports more than 70 per cent of
its medicines.
Civil society groups say
a strong PABS agreement could help countries like Kenya secure technology
transfer and manufacturing partnerships during future pandemics.
Comments 0
Sign in to join the conversation
Sign In Create AccountNo comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!