165 VIPs urge 20 economic powers for billions for COVID-19
In an open letter to governments of the Group of 20 nations, the leaders, ministers, top executives and scientists also called for USD 35 billion to support countries with weaker health systems and especially vulnerable populations, and at least USD 150 billion for developing countries to fight the medical and economic crisis.
And they urged the international community to waive this year's debt repayments from poorer countries, including USD 44 billion due from Africa.
The letter released Monday night urged coordinated action - "within the next few days - to address our deepening global health and economic crises from COVID-19."
The communique from the G20 leaders' summit on March 26 recognized the gravity and urgency of the crisis, the signatories said, but "we now require urgent specific measures that can be agreed on with speed and at scale."
The letter noted the problems were inter-connected.
"The economic emergency will not be resolved until the health emergency is effectively addressed: the health emergency will not end simply by conquering the disease in one country alone, but by ensuring recovery from COVID-19 in all countries."
The group called for a global pledging conference, coordinated by a G20 task force, to commit resources to meet emergency needs.
"All health systems - even the most sophisticated and best funded - are buckling under the pressures of the virus," it said.
"Yet if we do nothing as the disease spreads in poorer African, Asian, and Latin American cities and in fragile communities which have little testing equipment, ventilators, and medical supplies; and where social distancing and even washing hands are difficult to achieve," the group warned, "COVID-19 will persist there and re-emerge to hit the rest of the world with further rounds that will prolong the crisis."
The 165 signatories included former U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, 92 former presidents and prime ministers, the current prime ministers of Ethiopia and Bangladesh, Sierra Leone's president, philanthropist George Soros, former Irish president Mary Robinson, who chairs The Elders, and Graca Machel, the group's deputy chair.
Others include former British Prime Ministers Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and John Major, former U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, International Economic Association President Kaushik Basu, who was a World Bank chief economist, and Georgetown University Associate Professor Deus Bazira, co-director of the Center for Global Health Practice and Impact.
Instead of countries and localities competing for a share of the existing capacity, with the risk of spiking prices, the world should be vastly increasing capacity by supporting the World Health Organization in coordinating the production and procurement of medical supplies and technology to meet fully the worldwide demand, it said.
As for the economy, the group said, "our aim should be to prevent a liquidity crisis turning into a solvency crisis, and a global recession becoming a global depression." (AP) INDIND