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WHO Ends COVID Emergency


FILE: Syringes are pictured at a pharmacy in Pennsylvania, U.S., May 19, 2022.
FILE: Syringes are pictured at a pharmacy in Pennsylvania, U.S., May 19, 2022.

GENEVA - The COVID-19 pandemic, which for over three years has killed millions of people, wreaked economic havoc and deepened inequalities, no longer constitutes a global health emergency, the World Health Organization said Friday.

It is "with great hope that I declare COVID-19 over as a global health emergency", World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told reporters.

The U.N. health agency estimates that the pandemic had killed "at least 20 million" people - nearly three times the under seven million deaths officially recorded.

The move came after the WHO's independent emergency committee on the COVID crisis agreed during its 15th meeting on Thursday that the crisis no longer merited the organization's highest level of alert.

But, Tedros warned, the decision did not mean the danger was over, cautioning that the emergency status could be reinstated if the situation changes.

"The worst thing any country could do now is to use this news as a reason to let down its guard, to dismantle the systems it has built, or to send the message to its people that COVID-19 is nothing to worry about," he said.

The U.N. health agency first declared the so-called public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC) over the crisis on January 30, 2020.

But it was only after Tedros described the worsening COVID situation as a pandemic on March 11, 2020, that many countries woke up to the danger.

The WHO said last week that COVID deaths globally had plunged 95 percent since January, but the disease still killed 16,000 people worldwide last month alone.

Despite the lingering danger, the pandemic has faded from mind in many if not most countries.

Tedros warned Thursday that testing and tracing efforts have "declined significantly around the world, making it more difficult to track known variants and detect new ones".

Vaccines, which were developed at record speed and began being rolled out by late 2020, remain effective at preventing severe disease and death, despite the parade of new and more infectious Covid variants that have appeared.

But while indisputably a towering scientific feat, the vaccines also laid bare greed and gaping inequities, as wealthy countries horded the jabs, as poorer countries were left struggling for months to get hold of a single dose.

The pandemic also exposed staggering inequality in access to healthcare and services, from the long lines of Brazilians waiting to fill oxygen canisters for loved ones gasping for air, to the funeral pyres that crammed New Delhi's sidewalks and car parks as the bodies piled up in early 2021.

Even today, the emergence of new variants threatens to reignite the emergency.

Tedros has also warned of the ongoing impact of Long COVID, which provokes a long line of often severe and debilitating symptoms that can drag on for months or years.

This condition has been estimated to impact one in 10 people who contract COVID, suggesting that hundreds of millions of people could need longer-term care, he cautioned.

The world is currently striving to put in place measures to help avert future global health catastrophes.

But those efforts are being hampered by heated debate around the origins of the pandemic.

The virus was first detected in late 2019 in Wuhan China, but it remains unclear how and where it first began spreading among humans.

The issue, which has been heavily politicized, has proved divisive for the scientific community, which are split between a theory that the virus jumped naturally to humans from animals and one maintaining that the virus likely leaked from a Wuhan laboratory- a claim China has angrily denied.

Beijing stands accused of obstruction and has ignored repeated WHO requests for more access and information to help solve the mystery.

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