Dansk Interparlamentarisk Gruppes bestyrelse 2021-22
IPU Alm.del Bilag 3
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143rd IPU Assembly
Madrid, Spain
26-30 November 2021
Harnessing global parliamentary support
for vaccine equity in the fight against
the COVID-19 pandemic
Resolution adopted unanimously by the 143rd IPU Assembly
(Madrid, 29 November 2021)
The 143rd Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union,
Welcoming
the UN Security Council Resolution 2565 (2021) adopted on
26 February 2021,
Recalling
that the right to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of
physical, mental and social health and well-being is a fundamental human right enshrined
in Article 25 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Sustainable Development Goal 3, the Constitution
of the World Health Organization, the majority of national constitutions and other
international treaties and agreements to which the IPU Members are signatories,
Also recalling
that this right is accorded to all human beings regardless of
race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin,
property, disability, birth or other status,
Cognizant
that, on 23 September 2019, world leaders endorsed a
comprehensive political declaration on health at the UN High-Level Meeting on Universal
Health Coverage under the theme
Universal Health Coverage: Moving Together to Build
a Healthier World
in which they undertook to co-operate in strengthening health systems
to ensure that they are equitable, resilient and capable of meeting everyone’s needs as
an essential priority for international development,
Mindful
that, at the 141st IPU Assembly held in Belgrade, Serbia in
October 2019, the IPU adopted a landmark resolution entitled
Achieving Universal Health
Coverage by 2030: The role of parliaments in ensuring the right to health
calling for
parliaments to take all legal and policy measures to achieve Universal Health Coverage
and address barriers to access to health for all,
Noting
that the COVID-19 pandemic has been an ongoing moment of
reckoning for health systems and health security around the world, as well as to our
commitment in both word and deed to achieving Universal Health Coverage and
addressing barriers to access to health for all in such times of crisis,
Recognizing
that vaccination is part of a comprehensive strategy to reduce
transmission and save lives and is among the most important tools in the fight against the
pandemic, and reaffirming that extensive COVID-19 immunization is a global public good,
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Welcoming
the fact that the COVID-19 Vaccines Global Access (COVAX) initiative has
already delivered more than 550 million vaccine doses to low and lower-middle income countries,
including substantial amounts of vaccine donations from high income countries, and has secured
enough vaccines to cover 43 per cent of the populations concerned,
Concerned
that prolonged delays in the recognition and registration of vaccines
complicate the health and developmental crisis, economic downturn and suffering occasioned by
the COVID-19 pandemic in Africa and other regions among those most affected, and that vaccine
inequality translates into social and economic inequality resulting in more fatalities and increased
poverty,
Therefore the 143rd Assembly:
1.
Calls upon
the international community and the WHO to further advance joint efforts to
ensure timely, equitable and universal access to safe, affordable, quality and effective
vaccines, with particular regard to the needs of low and middle income countries and
the most affected regions;
Calls upon
countries to recognize the importance of the principle of equity, meaning
that each person must be vaccinated in accordance with their level of risk and needs,
and to ensure that that principle be reflected at the national and global levels with
respect to access to essential vaccines;
Encourages
vaccine manufacturers to provide regular, clear supply forecasts as to
how they will fulfil and prioritize their contracts with COVAX and other relevant
regional initiatives;
Also encourages
vaccine manufacturers to enhance the production of vaccines by
using flexible cooperation models such as building up fill and finish production
capacities, technology partnerships and licensing activities;
Calls upon
governments to harmonize all regulatory requirements to accelerate the
supply of vaccines, and provide the logistics and training for implementing large-scale
vaccination programmes;
Implores
parliamentarians to work with their national governments to exert a global
and collective influence on the WTO to eliminate all export restrictions and any other
trade barriers on COVID-19 vaccines and the inputs involved in their production;
Insists
on the fact that both national and international efforts to raise awareness
regarding the effectiveness of vaccines, to engage communities and to reduce vaccine
hesitancy are indispensable to attain a sufficient degree of immunization around the
world and that considerably more efforts in this field are required.
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