On Wednesday,UN chief Antonio Guterres condemned the distribution of vaccines for coronavirus viruses as 'wildly uneven and unfair',

 10 countries had taken 75 per cent of all vaccinations and called for global efforts to include all people in each nation. As soon as possible.Said UN chief Antonio Guterres 

                          

UN chief Antonio Guterres condemned the distribution of vaccines for coronavirus , only 10 countrieshad administered 75 per cent of all vaccinations
UN chief Antonio Guterres condemned the distribution of vaccines for coronavirus , only 10 countries had administered 75 per cent of all vaccinations  

On Wednesday (local time), UN chief Antonio Guterres condemned the distribution of vaccines for coronavirus viruses as "wildly uneven and unfair", saying only 10 countries had administered 75 per cent of all vaccinations and called for global efforts to include all people in each nation.


 

  On Wednesday (local time), UN chief Antonio Guterres condemned the distribution of vaccines for coronavirus viruses as "wildly uneven and unfair", saying only 10 countries had taken 75 per cent of all vaccinations and called for global efforts to include all people in each nation. . As soon as possible.


 

 According to an Al Jazeera report, Guterres, speaking at a high-level meeting of the UN Security Council, said 130 countries had not received a single dose of the vaccine.


  “At this critical moment, vaccine equity is the biggest ethical test before the world community,” he said.

 

  The UN chief called for an urgent "global immunization plan" to ensure fair vaccine distribution - to scientists, vaccine producers and those who would seek to fund the effort. Efforts must be made to bring them together - so that all the people of each nation become inoculated as soon as possible. , Al Jazeera reported.

 

  He called for the establishment of an emergency task force aimed at bringing together the top economic members of the G-20 "pharmaceutical compos and key industry and logistics actors".

 

  Earlier on Wednesday, United States Secretary of State Anthony Blinken spoke at the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) on the need to increase access to the safe and effective Covid-19 vaccine.

 

  He called on countries not to "use vaccines as an excuse to violate human rights or fundamental freedoms."

 

  "In order to better understand this epidemic and prepare for the next one, all countries need to provide all the information from the first day of the outbreak." So the world will learn as soon as possible. Transparency, information sharing, access to international experts - these are real challenges that must be part of our common vision, "he said.

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