WHO pledges inquiry into coronavirus response ‘at earliest moment’

China commits to $2bn in funding as US cites ‘apparent attempt to conceal outbreak’

World Health Organization director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus during the opening of the World Health Assembly virtual meeting in Geneva. Photograph: Christopher Black/World Health Organization/AFP via Getty Images
World Health Organization director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus during the opening of the World Health Assembly virtual meeting in Geneva. Photograph: Christopher Black/World Health Organization/AFP via Getty Images

The World Health Organization said on Monday an independent review of the global coronavirus response would begin as soon as possible and it received backing and a hefty pledge of funds from China, which is in the spotlight as the origin of the pandemic.

But the WHO's chief critic, the US administration of President Donald Trump, decried an "apparent attempt to conceal this outbreak by at least one member state".

Mr Trump has already suspended US funding for the WHO after accusing it of being too China-centric, and at the same time led international criticism of Beijing’s perceived lack of transparency in the early stages of the crisis.

Without mentioning China by name, health secretary Alex Azar made clear Washington considered the WHO jointly responsible.

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“We must be frank about one of the primary reasons this outbreak spun out of control,” he said. “There was a failure by this organisation to obtain the information that the world needed, and that failure cost many lives.”

WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, for his part, said: "WHO sounded the alarm early, and we sounded it often."

When the WHO declared a global emergency on January 30th, he said, there were fewer than 100 cases outside China, and no deaths.

‘Openness and transparency’

He was addressing a virtual meeting of the WHO's decision-making body, the World Health Assembly, at which President Xi Jinping said China had acted with "openness and transparency and responsibility".

Mr Tedros, who has always promised a review, told the forum it would come “at the earliest appropriate moment” and make recommendations for the future. He received robust backing from the WHO’s independent oversight panel.

“Every country and every organisation must examine its response and learn from its experience,” he said, adding that the review must cover “all actors in good faith”.

In its first report on the handling of the pandemic, the seven-member oversight committee said the WHO had “demonstrated leadership and made important progress in its Covid-19 response”.

The panel endorsed a review, but said conducting it now could hamper the WHO’s response to the pandemic.

It also said “an imperfect and evolving understanding” was not unusual when a new disease emerged and, in an apparent rejoinder to Mr Trump, said a “rising politicisation of pandemic response” was hindering the effort to defeat the virus.

A resolution drafted by the European Union calling for an independent evaluation of the WHO's performance appeared to have won consensus backing among the WHO's 194 states. It was expected to be debated and adopted on Tuesday.

China has previously opposed calls for a review of the origin and spread of coronavirus, but Mr Xi signalled that Beijing would accept an impartial evaluation of the global response, once the pandemic is brought under control.

“This work needs a scientific and professional attitude, and needs to be led by the WHO. And the principles of objectivity and fairness need to be upheld,” he told the meeting via video.

“All along we have acted with openness and transparency and responsibility.”

He pledged $2 billion over the next two years to help deal with Covid-19, especially in developing countries.

The amount is roughly equivalent to the WHO’s entire annual programme budget for last year, and more than compensates for Mr Trump’s freeze of US payments that had been worth about $400 million a year.

Mr Azar said the United States supported "an independent review of every aspect of WHO's response".

Wuhan market

The WHO and most experts say the virus is likely to have emerged in a market selling wildlife in the central city of Wuhan late last year. US secretary of state Mike Pompeo said this month there was "significant" evidence that it had come from a laboratory in Wuhan, a charge China rejects.

The oversight panel said that, for the next phase of the pandemic, the WHO would need some $1.7 billion by the end of the year, leaving a funding shortfall of $1.3 billion. This did not take account of China’s pledge.

China will also make any Covid-19 vaccines that it develops a public good to help to curb the pandemic, Mr Xi said. – Reuters