Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Feds looking to send more aid to vaccine alliance

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Feb, 2022 10:44 AM
  • Feds looking to send more aid to vaccine alliance

OTTAWA - Canada is considering sending more money or ancillary vaccine supplies to the COVAX global vaccine sharing alliance after a plea from the organizers that it was running out of cash.

COVAX celebrated delivering its one billionth dose in mid-January and one-third of the population in the countries reliant on COVAX for their vaccines is now fully vaccinated.

Seth Berkley, the CEO of the Gavi vaccine alliance helping run COVAX, is hopeful that bigger vaccine supplies in 2022 will help meet the World Health Organization target to get 70 per cent of the population in every country fully vaccinated by the end of June.

But Berkley says COVAX can't accept any more donations of doses unless it also gets more cash to buy syringes and other supplies needed to get those doses into arms.

A spokesman for International Development Minister Harjit Sajjan says he planned to reach out to COVAX to see how Canada could help.

Canada has committed $545 million to help COVAX thus far, but the alliance is seeking another US$5.2 billion in 2022 and has only raised about US$200 million toward that so far.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Omicron spread must be slowed: health experts

Omicron spread must be slowed: health experts
Canada's chief public health officer, Dr. Theresa Tam, wrote in an annual report on the state of public health in the country that the pandemic has exposed long-standing cracks in the system.

Omicron spread must be slowed: health experts

Bitter cold, snow forecast for parts of B.C.

Bitter cold, snow forecast for parts of B.C.
Special weather statements have been issued by Environment Canada including the Cariboo, West Columbia and Williston regions, with a prediction of 10 to 20 centimetres of snow starting Friday night.

Bitter cold, snow forecast for parts of B.C.

Officer rescues pair from Surrey, B.C., pool

Officer rescues pair from Surrey, B.C., pool
Police say preliminary reports into the crash on Wednesday indicate the driver of the vehicle lost control, slammed through a fence and landed in the in-ground pool. 

Officer rescues pair from Surrey, B.C., pool

Conservative MPs free to travel internationally

Conservative MPs free to travel internationally
Politicians jet-setting to different vacation destinations drew much attention last year as federal and provincial governments told Canadians to forgo their travel and gathering plans to combat rising COVID-19 caseloads.

Conservative MPs free to travel internationally

COVID cases on the rise due to Omicron

COVID cases on the rise due to Omicron
Early data suggests Omicron is more transmissible than the currently dominant Delta variant, with a doubling time of about two days. British Columbia Health Minister Adrian Dix says the province is considering further public health orders on public and private gatherings, with an announcement expected next week.

COVID cases on the rise due to Omicron

Canada hasn't dropped peacekeeping promise: Anand

Canada hasn't dropped peacekeeping promise: Anand
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau first pledged the quick reaction force to a future UN mission while hosting an international peacekeeping summit in Vancouver in 2017, yet the Liberal government has yet to make good on the promise.

Canada hasn't dropped peacekeeping promise: Anand