Explainer-What is on (and off) the agenda of the WHO Assembly?
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[May 20, 2022]
By Emma Farge and Jennifer Rigby
GENEVA (Reuters) - More than 100 world
health ministers will meet in Geneva next week for the World Health
Organization's first in-person assembly in three years as the U.N.
agency seeks to define its future role in global health policy.
The agenda of the World Health Assembly (WHA) is the most packed in the
WHO's 75-year history and is seen as an historic opportunity to move on
from the COVID-19 pandemic, which has led to 15 million deaths, and
prepare for the next global outbreak. [L5N2X96B0]
However, many of the most pressing topics, such as reforms of the rules
around disease outbreaks, will be postponed for later or discussed only
in the corridors.
Here's a summary of what will and won't be discussed:
ON THE AGENDA....
WHO FUNDING BOOST
Donors agreed a 'pivotal' deal last month to gradually raise their
mandatory contributions to the WHO budget to reach 50% of the budget by
2028-2029 or 2030-31. In return, the WHO agreed to study their reform
proposals.
Currently, their set fees represent just a fraction (16%) of the WHO's
total budget, which means it cannot fund some programmes since the money
is earmarked for donors' pet projects. The assembly is expected to
approve the deal on Tuesday.
RE-ELECTION OF TEDROS
WHO's Ethiopian Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus is all but
certain to be re-elected via a secret ballot on Tuesday, having overcome
criticism from his own government and a crisis last year following
sexual abuse reports against WHO staff in Congo.
During the assembly, Tedros is also set to renew the global health
agency's main "triple billion" goals that aim to boost universal health
coverage, improve health and well-being and protect people better in
health emergencies.
UKRAINE
The WHO's Europe region passed a resolution against Russia this month
and asked Tedros to prepare a report on Ukraine's health emergency.
Members are also preparing a resolution to be submitted to the assembly,
although diplomats say it will stop short of suspending Russia's voting
rights, as some initially sought.
IHR REFORMS
Reforms to the legally-binding rules that govern countries' obligations
on public health emergencies, the International Health Regulations (IHR),
will be raised.
However, the focus will be on a U.S.-led effort to expedite the
application of future reforms from 24 months to 12 months, WHO principal
legal officer Steve Solomon said.
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The World Health Organization logo is pictured at the entrance of
the WHO building, in Geneva, Switzerland, December 20, 2021.
REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo
Negotiations on other proposed
changes will take place later amid initial opposition from some
members, diplomats said.
OFF THE AGENDA....
COVID ORIGINS
The WHO tasked a scientific advisory panel with probing the origins
of the SARS-CoV-2 virus after a preliminary investigation into early
COVID-19 cases in China last year left some questions unanswered. A
WHO spokesperson said the panel's report was expected soon but would
not be released as part of the assembly.
REFORM OF RULES
Most of the IHR reform negotiations will take place in the two years
following the meeting, diplomats say.
These include sensitive items proposed by Washington like the
deployment of expert teams to outbreak sites and a new compliance
committee to monitor implementation of the rules, a WHO document
showed.
Russia has also submitted reforms, diplomats say.
PANDEMIC TREATY
The IHR are widely seen as insufficient for dealing with a global
pandemic and Tedros is seeking a new pandemic treaty. Proposals for
the new pact might include rules on vaccine-sharing and a proposed
ban on wildlife markets.
Negotiations are set to continue in June and a final treaty, whose
legal status is yet to be determined, would not be ready until 2024.
PANDEMIC FUND
The G20 has agreed to set up a multi-billion dollar global fund for
pandemic preparedness that will be set up outside of the WHO,
probably at the World Bank. WHO's role in the fund is still being
decided and it is not on the agenda for the assembly.
(Reporting by Emma Farge in Geneva and Jennifer Rigby in London;
additional reporting by Alistair Smout in London; Editing by Frank
Jack Daniel)
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