WHO chief: Vaccine nationalism ‘will prolong the pandemic, not shorten it’

Spain declared a national state of emergency to tackle a second coronavirus wave as the World Health Organization (WHO) reported a third straight day of record new infections around the world, AFP reported

AFP said that France set a daily record of more than 50,000 COVID-19 cases.

In the US, which has the world’s worst toll at around 225,000 deaths, challenger Joe Biden accused President Donald Trump’s administration of waving “the white flag of defeat” after his chief of staff Mark Meadows said: “We are not going to control the pandemic.”

The WHO has warned that some countries are on a “dangerous track,” with too many witnessing an exponential increase in cases, and called on authorities to take decisive action to curb the spread of the disease.

The UN agency’s figures showed that 465,319 cases were declared on Saturday alone, half of them in Europe, which it said was at an especially critical juncture with winter looming.

COVID-19 has now claimed the lives of 1.1 million people and infected more than 42 million globally, AFP reported.

WHO head Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called for global solidarity in a future rollout of any vaccine, warning that “vaccine nationalism will prolong the pandemic, not shorten it.”