Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada gives $790M to help vaccinate in more vulnerable countries

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 May, 2020 11:34 PM
  • Canada gives $790M to help vaccinate in more vulnerable countries

Canada will put $790 million toward vaccinating the world's more vulnerable populations and distributing a COVID-19 vaccine around the world, if an effective one is discovered, International Development Minister Karina Gould announced Tuesday.

The sum includes $600 million over four years to help GAVI, the Vaccine Alliance — a major international non-profit organization — provide routine immunizations to children all over the world, as well as administer a potential COVID-19 vaccine.

GAVI's mission is to improve access to vaccines for vulnerable children, and immunize them against pneumonia, diarrhea, meningitis and other diseases.
The organization will also play a key role in ensuring less-developed countries aren't left out of access to a vaccine to stop the pandemic spread of the novel coronavirus.

It is Canada's biggest-ever pledge to GAVI — $100 million more than a multi-year promise in 2016. "COVID-19 has demonstrated that viruses do not know borders," Gould said in a statement Tuesday when she announced the commitment. "Our health here in Canada depends on the health of everyone, everywhere."

Gould also pledged $190 million over four years to support the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, a partnership between several international agencies, including GAVI and the World Health Organization.

The money is intended to prevent a resurgence of polio and other communicable diseases for which vaccines already exist.
ONE Canada, an advocacy group aimed at eliminating world poverty, applauded the investment. "While countries around the world are fighting COVID-19, it's crucial that routine immunizations continue so that we don't have to deal with other diseases like measles spreading at the same time," said director Stuart Hickox.

The federal government says the wild poliovirus, which mainly affects young children and can cause permanent paralysis, has been eliminated from 99.9 per cent of the world's regions.

The WHO reported 176 cases of the wild poliovirus in 2019, and has discovered 54 cases so far this year, the vast majority of them in Pakistan.

MORE National ARTICLES

Tables Offer Free Food, Essentials For Those In Need

VANCOUVER - While panicked shoppers have been buying stores out of toilet paper and flour stocks, two tables have appeared on streets in the Vancouver area stacked with essential items and a sign that says "free."

Tables Offer Free Food, Essentials For Those In Need

Mandatory Quarantines To Apply To Returning Travellers, Freeland Says

OTTAWA - The federal government will start enforcing 14-day quarantines on travellers returning to Canada to try to limit the spread of COVID-19.    

Mandatory Quarantines To Apply To Returning Travellers, Freeland Says

Canada To Help World's Poor Cope With Covid-19, Amid UN Appeal: Aid Minister

OTTAWA - Canada will spend millions to help the world's most desperate people fight COVID-19 because it is in the country's long-term security interest as well as being the right thing to do, says International Development Minister Karina Gould.

Canada To Help World's Poor Cope With Covid-19, Amid UN Appeal: Aid Minister

Schlatter Handed Life Sentence With No Parole For 25 Years In Richey's Murder

TORONTO - A Toronto man who sexually assaulted and strangled a young woman hours after they met has been sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years.    

Schlatter Handed Life Sentence With No Parole For 25 Years In Richey's Murder

Words To Remember: Canadian Newsmakers Have Their Say On COVID-19

A look at some of the top quotes from across Canada on Tuesday in relation to COVID-19:    

Words To Remember: Canadian Newsmakers Have Their Say On COVID-19

Saskatchewan Preparing For Thousands To Die: Document

Saskatchewan Preparing For Thousands To Die: Document
Some estimates for infections as well as preparations on how to deal with the spread of the virus are outlined in a planning presentation by the authority dated last week and obtained by The Canadian Press.    

Saskatchewan Preparing For Thousands To Die: Document