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Geopolitics made pandemic far worse: expert
By Nina LARSON
Geneva (AFP) Jan 5, 2021

Latvia health minister fired in vaccine row
Riga (AFP) Jan 5, 2021 - Latvia's prime minister on Tuesday fired his health minister in a row over coronavirus vaccination policy, straining ties within the governing coalition.

Krisjanis Karins said the Baltic state was "struggling with the consequences of not having a clear and comprehensible plan of action".

Latvia has focused its vaccination plan mainly on the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, which has so far not been authorised in the European Union.

Government opponents have criticised the slow start of Latvia's vaccination campaign and the choice to purchase a relatively small amount of Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines, which have been authorised by the European Medicines Agency.

EU member Latvia, which has a population of 1.9 million, had some of the lowest infection rates in Europe during the first wave of the virus.

But it has been hit hard by the second wave, with hospitals operating at near maximum capacity.

Health Minister Ilze Vinkele accepted the prime minister's request for her to step down but lashed out during an online press conference on vaccination plans.

"The prime minister is trying to shift his own responsibility for the whole Covid crisis management," she told reporters.

"Our vaccination plan is even more detailed than those adopted by Estonia and Germany," she said, adding that under her plan 82 percent of Latvian residents would be vaccinated by the end of 2021.

Karins asked Defence Minister Artis Pabriks to temporarily take on the role of health minister but he refused.

"In this Covid-19 crisis I think that duties of the health minister must be carried out by Karins himself!" Pabriks said on Twitter.

Karins then called on the Vinkele's liberal Development/For! party to find a new candidate for health minister, drawing criticism from his coalition partners.

"He should not dismiss Vinkele while Karins himself, as the prime minister, does not have a better candidate, which he apparently does not have, since he leaves finding the candidate to the Development/For! party," MP Eriks Pucens of KPV party told LETA newswire.

Latvia's political scene is highly fragmented.

The cabinet consists of five parliamentary groups spanning eight political parties plus 10 independent lawmakers.

It came to power after three months of negotiations and two unsuccessful attempts to form a government following elections in 2018.

Geopolitical tensions in play before the Covid-19 pandemic coloured the international health response, dramatically deepening the crisis, a renowned political scientist and global health expert told AFP.

Over a year after the novel coronavirus first surfaced in China, more than 1.8 million people have died and nearly 86 million have been infected with the virus worldwide.

It did not have to be this bad, said Ilona Kickbusch, the founding director and chair of the Global Health Centre in Geneva.

Without the trade wars and other tensions raging in 2019, "January 2020 would not have played out the way it did," she said in an interview.

"Geopolitics ... put the world in this situation."

Previous global health crises have occurred during times of great geopolitical tension, said Kickbusch, but countries have in recent decades generally managed to rise above their differences to cooperate to combat deadly diseases.

The world managed to come together to eradicate smallpox at the height of the Cold War, she pointed out.

Even when SARS, another coronavirus, surfaced in China and caused havoc between 2002 and 2003, the global reaction was one of cooperation and a push for more transparency, she said.

Back then, Beijing acknowledged it had made mistakes, reorganised its health ministry and created the China Centres for Disease Control. Other countries gave it the benefit of the doubt and called for more cooperation.

"SARS actually led to China (understanding) that they needed to be much more integrated into the (global) system," Kickbusch said. "It was a period of opening."

- 'Closing of the mind' -

That stands in stark contrast to the response to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Now, she said: "There is a closing of the mind, quite clearly, on all sides."

Before the crisis, geopolitical tensions had bled into the global health response, she said, pointing to how the US-China trade war had morphed into a "geopolitical blame game".

As a result, she said, "China clamped down totally (and) the US did what it did," and in the end "the whole world has suffered".

One of the casualties of the confrontational pandemic response could be much-needed clarity around the animal source of Covid-19.

The origins remain bitterly contested, amid recriminations and conjecture from the international community, and obfuscation from Beijing determined to keep control of its virus narrative.

A team of international experts is finally expected to head to China this week to investigate, but observers fear the trail may have gone cold more than a year after the virus surfaced.

"I think it will be incredibly difficult to be able to find the origin of the virus, because so much time has passed," Kickbusch said.

While the origin may remain a mystery, she nevertheless hoped the mission would help uncover how fateful decisions were taken and shine a light on the importance of decoupling global health from geopolitics.

"We need to spend 2021 on trying to get global health back on track," she said.

Otherwise, she warned, "we will have serious, serious problems".


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