Sunday, June 21, 2026
ADVT 
National

Pressure mounts on Canada to donate vaccines

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2021 09:54 AM
  • Pressure mounts on Canada to donate vaccines

Almost three dozen Canadian aid groups, faith-based organizations and global development advocates say Canada needs to donate some COVID-19 doses to a global vaccine alliance immediately.

The groups, including the Canadian arms of One, UNICEF, World Vision, the Mennonite Central Committee, Canadian Council of Imams and the Anglican Council of Indigenous People, say Canada will have almost 100 million excess doses by the end of the year and needs to start sharing some of them now.

International Development Minister Karina Gould says Canada will share doses eventually but doesn't have any excess vaccine at the moment because the country is still trying to get every Canadian immunized.

On Wednesday, Canada doubled its financial commitment to $440 million to help the global vaccine sharing alliance known as COVAX buy doses directly from manufacturers.

Several countries however have also pledged to send doses to COVAX, including 30 million each Japan, France and Germany, 15 million from Spain and four million from Belgium.

Canada has administered more doses per capita than any of those countries and the organizations are calling on Ottawa to immediately share one dose for every 10 Canadians already vaccinated.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

No need for tariffs, Trudeau tells Trump

No need for tariffs, Trudeau tells Trump
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau urged Donald Trump to think twice Monday before imposing new tariffs on Canadian aluminum, saying the sector is emerging from the pandemic-induced production stance that prompted the White House to consider such measures in the first place.

No need for tariffs, Trudeau tells Trump

Manhunt continues for missing Quebec father

Manhunt continues for missing Quebec father
Quebec provincial police continued their intensive search Monday for the father of two young girls whose bodies were found Saturday in a small town southwest of Quebec City.

Manhunt continues for missing Quebec father

Trudeau says he's sorry for WE involvement

Trudeau says he's sorry for WE involvement
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has apologized for not recusing himself from the government's decision to have WE Charity manage a $900-million student-aid program, saying his family's longtime involvement with the organization should have kept him out of the discussions.

Trudeau says he's sorry for WE involvement

Ontario awaits Stage 3 of its pandemic plan

Ontario awaits Stage 3 of its pandemic plan
A lot of businesses across Ontario are eagerly awaiting an announcement today from the provincial government.

Ontario awaits Stage 3 of its pandemic plan

RCMP at centre of facial recognition lawsuit

RCMP at centre of facial recognition lawsuit
A Quebec photographer wants a judge to order the RCMP to destroy all of the images of Canadians it obtained through a controversial facial-recognition tool.

RCMP at centre of facial recognition lawsuit

MacKay's campaign says no deal was cut to woo deputy party leader's endorsement

MacKay's campaign says no deal was cut to woo deputy party leader's endorsement
Peter MacKay's Conservative leadership campaign said Monday the party's deputy leader wasn't promised a similarly high-profile position in the House of Commons in exchange for supporting MacKay for the top job.

MacKay's campaign says no deal was cut to woo deputy party leader's endorsement