ubamobile

access ad

ziva

Thu. Apr 24th, 2025
Spread the love

The World Health Organization (WHO) has said the coronavirus (COVID-19) “may never go away.” It, therefore, warned against any attempt to predict how long it would keep circulating and called for a “massive effort” to counter it. The dire warning came as Nigeria’s coronavirus infection cases rose above the 5,000 mark on Thursday with 193 new Covid-19 cases confirmed by Nigeria Centre for Disease Control. A total of 5,162 cases have now been recorded in 34 states and the FCT. A total of 110 recoveries were recorded, increasing the figure from 1,070 to 1,180, while fatalities increased from 164 to 170. NCDC confirmed 58 new cases of coronavirus in Lagos, while it confirmed 46 in Kano State.

 

In Jigawa, NCDC reported 35 new cases and also confirmed 12 new cases of the virus in Yobe State.

Nigeria capital city Abuja had nine new cases; Ogun State got seven new cases while Plateau and Gombe had five new cases each. Imo State confirmed four new cases while in Edo, Kwara and Borno, NCDC confirmed three new cases in each of the state. Bauchi, Nasarawa, Ondo also had one new case each.

 

Speaking at the presidential task force on Covid-19 briefing on Thursday, Chikwe Ihekweazu, the NCDC director-general, said with the rate of transmission, Nigerians have to learn to live with the virus. “I think it’s become clear to all of us that we will have to learn to live with this virus for some time to come, and living with it means not only saving lives from the virus, but saving lives from all the other things that afflict us,” he said.

 

WHO emergencies expert, Mike Ryan, told an online briefing: “It is important to put this on the table: this virus may become just another endemic virus in our communities. I think it is important we are realistic and I don’t think anyone can predict when this disease will disappear. I think there are no promises in this and there are no dates. This disease may settle into a long problem, or it may not be.”

But according to him, the world has some control over how it copes with the disease, although this would take a “massive effort” even if a vaccine is found — a prospect he described as a “massive moonshot”.

 

Ryan noted that vaccines exist for other illnesses, such as measles, that have not been eliminated.

“We need to get into the mindset that it is going to take some time to come out of this pandemic,” WHO epidemiologist Maria van Kerkhove told the briefing. WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus added: “The trajectory is in our hands, and it’s everybody’s business, and we should all contribute to stopping this pandemic.”

 

On the heels of the WHO warning, over 140 world leaders and experts yesterday signed an open letter calling on all governments to unite behind a people’s vaccine against coronavirus. The signatories include President of South Africa and Chair of the African Union Cyril Ramaphosa; Prime Minister of Pakistan Imran Khan; President of the Republic of Senegal, Macky Sall; and President of the Republic of Ghana Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo. Other signatories include former President of Liberia Ellen Johnson Sirleaf; former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Gordon Brown; former President of Mexico Ernesto Zedillo; former United Nations Development Program Administrator and former Prime Minister of New Zealand Helen Clark.

 

The letter, which marked the most ambitious position yet by world leaders on a Covid-19 vaccine, according to a statement by the Joint UN Program on AIDS (UNAIDS), demanded that all vaccines, treatments and tests be patent-free, mass-produced, distributed fairly and made available to all people, in all countries, free of charge. Coordinated by UNAIDS and Oxfam, the letter warned that the world should not have monopolies and competition stand in the way of the universal need to save lives.

The leaders recognised that progress is being made and that many countries and international organisations are cooperating multilaterally on research and development, funding and access, including the $8 billion pledged on May 4 at the European Union’s international pledging marathon. However, as many countries and companies proceed with unprecedented speed to develop an effective vaccine, the leaders called for concrete commitments to ensure it is affordable and available to all in the quickest possible time. Some of their resolutions include a mandatory worldwide pooling of patents and sharing of all Covid-19-related knowledge, data and technologies in order to ensure that any nation can produce or buy affordable doses of vaccines, treatments and tests.

 

The rapid establishment of an equitable global manufacturing and distribution plan for all vaccines, treatments and tests that is fully funded by rich nations and which guarantees transparent ‘at true cost prices’ and supplies in accordance with need rather than the ability to pay. This would include an urgent action to massively increase manufacturing capacity to produce the vaccines in sufficient quantities and train and recruit millions of health workers to distribute them. A guarantee that Covid-19 vaccines, treatments and tests are provided free of charge to everyone, everywhere, with priority given to frontline workers, vulnerable people and poor countries with the least capacity to save lives. 

 

Ramaphosa said: “Billions of people today await a vaccine that is our best hope of ending this pandemic. As the countries of Africa, we are resolute that the Covid-19 vaccine must be patent-free, rapidly made and distributed and free for all. All science must be shared between governments. No people should be pushed to the back of the vaccine queue because of where they live or what they earn.”

 

Khan, said: “We must work together to beat this virus. We must pool all the knowledge, experience and resources at our disposal for the good of all humanity. No leader can rest easy until every individual in every nation is able to rapidly access a vaccine free of charge.”

 

Also, during the daily media briefing by the Presidential Task Force (PTF) on Covid-19 yesterday, Director General of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu commended global efforts towards developing an effective vaccine. He noted however that Nigeria would only benefit if “we engage globally to have access to diagnostics and therapeutics.”

 

Meanwhile, a United States-based Nigerian vaccinologist, Dr. Simon Agwale, on Wednesday, commended the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) for pledging to fund indigenous health researches towards finding homegrown vaccines for coronavirus, saying it would make the nation’s health sector responsive to emerging health challenges.

 

CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele had on Tuesday in Abuja said the apex bank would provide funding for the project. Agwale, who is the Chief Executive of Innovative Biotech, said: “This is what we have been calling for. Nigeria is blessed with scientists, both at home and abroad, and what they need is just an enabling environment. We have the resources, which when properly exploited, can make Nigeria one of the health destinations of the world.” He added: “Resorting overseas for everything kills our economy and makes us perpetually dependent.”

 

About the author: Emmanuel Asiwe admin
Tell us something about yourself.

By admin