Sunday, December 21, 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

B.C. announces financial help for evacuees

B.C. announces financial help for evacuees
Mike Farnworth is asking residents to pay close attention to the weather forecast as more storms are expected after a so-called atmospheric river dumped an unprecedented amount of rain on the southwest part of the province.

B.C. announces financial help for evacuees

Union calls for review of veterans' case managers

Union calls for review of veterans' case managers
The Union of Veterans' Affairs Employees made its request in a letter to Veterans Affairs Minister Lawrence MacAulay this week after The Canadian Press reported this month on the large number of veterans assigned to individual case managers.

Union calls for review of veterans' case managers

Regulator approves J&J vaccine from Baltimore

Regulator approves J&J vaccine from Baltimore
Canada had rejected hundreds of thousands of doses of the vaccine this past summer due to contamination concerns about the plant, and only imported Johnson & Johnson doses, also known as Janssen, manufactured in Europe.    

Regulator approves J&J vaccine from Baltimore

O'Toole's Tory caucus puts on show of solidarity

O'Toole's Tory caucus puts on show of solidarity
Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole and his caucus put on a show of solidarity today, exactly a week after he was explaining why he decided to kick out a senator for publicly denouncing his leadership. O'Toole was presented with a hockey jersey that British Columbia MP Bob Zimmer says came from caucus "to our captain."

O'Toole's Tory caucus puts on show of solidarity

Greens to choose interim leader tonight

Greens to choose interim leader tonight
The Greens will tonight choose an interim leader to take the helm of their troubled party, following the resignation of Annamie Paul. Paul Manly, the former MP who lost his British Columbia seat in the election, is the favourite to take on the challenge.    

Greens to choose interim leader tonight

New college to regulate immigration consultants

New college to regulate immigration consultants
The College of Immigration and Citizenship Consultants officially opened on Nov. 23, and replaces the previous regulator, the Immigration Consultants of Canada Regulatory Council.

New college to regulate immigration consultants