UNICEF seeks more COVID-19 vaccines in Africa to stem death – Vanguard - Africa Matters

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Tuesday, October 5, 2021

UNICEF seeks more COVID-19 vaccines in Africa to stem death – Vanguard

UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, Angelique Kidjo and other African influencers  Monday  signed an open letter to G20 leaders calling on them to urgently donate COVID-19 vaccines to Africa even as they disclosed that  COVID-19 deaths are declining almost everywhere except in Africa.

Although 23 million COVID-19 vaccines arrived in Africa in September, a 10-fold increase from June. yet just 60 million Africans have been vaccinated so far. 

In a press statement, they said: “Rich nations have pledged to donate over a billion vaccines this year and hundreds of millions more in 2022, as well as supporting Africa to manufacture and buy its own vaccines. 

This gives us hope, but most of these promises remain unfulfilled. Africa cannot wait. We need doses now,” the letter urges.

Also, top Nigerians in the field of business and entertainment have joined the call, including musician and UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, Femi Kuti, business leader and philanthropist Tony Elumelu; musician and UNICEF Nigerian Ambassador Cobhams  Asuquo; actor and producer Genevieve Nnaji, and actor Daniel Etim Effiong on the need for more COVID-19 vaccines in Africa.

The statement notes that the signatories are asking fellow Africans to support the letter over the next month in the run up to the G20 meetings in Rome at the end of October.

Nigerian singer and songwriter David Adedeji Adeleke (Davido) issued a special video message urging that vaccines are shared fairly with Africa, saying “For this pandemic to truly end, it has to end everywhere. Africans must have their fair access to the vaccines.

“This is the only way the Covid-19 can get out of here. As an African, as a Nigerian, I support UNICEF’s call on governments with excess doses to share them now. Let us join hands together to ensure fair access to vaccines for everyone.”

The open letter reads, “This inequity is unjust. It is also self-defeating. It leaves Africans – and the whole world – at the mercy of the virus. Unchecked, it can create new and more dangerous variants.”

UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, Angelique Kidjo, said: “I want the most at risk Africans to be safe, to not die or end up in hospital with COVID-19 because they didn’t have access to vaccines. The only way that is possible is to urgently vaccinate much higher numbers of people in Africa – and we need doses and support for vaccine roll outs to do that quickly enough.

 “I am calling on my fellow Africans to get behind this letter, to support the Call from Africa, because we cannot wait for promises to be fulfilled, we need vaccines now, in the health centres of our countries, and in the arms of our health workers and most vulnerable brothers

and sisters.

Vanguard News Nigeria



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