UN Secretary-General's Statement On The COVID-19 Pandemic, Two Years On
Two years ago, the lives of people around the globe were upended by a virus.
COVID-19 spread quickly and relentlessly into every corner of the world — shutting down economies, choking off transportation networks and supply chains, closing schools, separating people from their loved ones, and plunging millions of people into poverty.
The pandemic’s most tragic toll has been on the health and lives of millions, with more than 446 million cases worldwide, more than six million deaths confirmed, and countless more grappling with worsening mental health.
Thanks to unprecedented public health measures, and the extraordinarily rapid development and deployment of vaccines, many parts of the world are bringing the pandemic under control.
But it would be a grave mistake to think the pandemic is over.
The distribution of vaccines remains scandalously unequal. Manufacturers are producing 1.5 billion doses per month, but nearly three billion people are still waiting for their first shot.
This failure is the direct result of policy and budgetary decisions that prioritize the health of people in wealthy countries over the health of people in poor countries.
This is a moral indictment of our world. It is also a recipe for more variants, more lockdowns and more sorrow and sacrifice in every country.
Our world cannot afford a two-tier recovery from COVID-19.
Despite the numerous other global crises, we must reach our goal of vaccinating 70 per cent of people in all countries by the middle of this year.
Governments and pharmaceutical companies need to work together to multiply the number of countries able to produce tests, vaccines and treatments by sharing licenses and intellectual property, and providing the necessary technological and financial support.
At the same time, we need strong national vaccine-delivery systems at the ready — including efforts to counter disinformation and get vaccines into arms.
Science and solidarity have proven to be an unbeatable combination. We must re-dedicate ourselves to ending this pandemic for all people and all countries, and closing this sad chapter in humanity’s history, once and for all.