'Let Us Globalize Compassion': Nobel Laureate Urges World Leaders to Waive Vaccine Patents

May 27, 2021 0 By HearthstoneYarns

Nobel Peace laureate Kailash Satyarthi has called on world leaders to reflect upon the longterm impacts of the choices they make today, urging them to support a proposal to waive Covid-19 vaccine patents and other related intellectual property restrictions.

Satyarthi made the demands in a keynote address at the opening of the World Health Organization’s annual World Health Assembly, which is attended by global health ministers and delegations from WHO member states. The weeklong, virtual event kicked off Monday and runs through June 1.

Saying he was representing the “voice of the millions of voiceless children who are left behind”—those suffering from hunger and poverty, forced into exploitation, and facing “the worst health outcomes” and barriers to education and proper sanitation—Satyarthi said the assembly comes at “a defining time in our society” that should spur contemplation of the “human costs” of choices made.

He derided the fact that a mere 0.13% of the estimated $8 trillion spent by world governments last year to fight the Covid-19 pandemic went to the “most marginalized communities,” who are suffering “immeasurable misery.”

Beyond being a health and economic crisis, Satyarthi said the pandemic represents a “crisis of justice, crisis of civilization, and a crisis of humanity.”

Satyarthi is founder of the Kailash Satyarthi Children’s Foundation, which works to end child labor and exploitation. He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2014 for his work to end child slavery. The award that year was jointly won by child education activist Malala Yousafzai.

“While the world has suffered as one,” Satyarthi said, “we have not suffered equally.”

He cited as one example the fact that “two-thirds of the world’s largest companies made an additional $109 billion in 2020.” At the same time, he said, “140 million children and their families will be pushed into acute poverty.”

“This is unacceptable. This is injustice,” he said.

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