Tuesday, July 7, 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

2019 A Record-Breaking Year For B.C. Lottery Winners

From Tumbler Ridge to Richmond, Merritt to Port Alberni, BCLC paid out lottery players in B.C. with a record-breaking $785 million in winnings this year.

2019 A Record-Breaking Year For B.C. Lottery Winners

Montreal's Horse-Drawn Carriage Industry Rides Off Into History, But Not Quietly

MONTREAL - It's the end of the line for King and Maximus, Marilyn and Maya, and the rest of the gentle draft horses that live in an aging stable in Montreal's Griffintown neighbourhood.    

Montreal's Horse-Drawn Carriage Industry Rides Off Into History, But Not Quietly

New Industry Develops Around Sucking Carbon Dioxide Out Of Atmosphere

New Industry Develops Around Sucking Carbon Dioxide Out Of Atmosphere
Somewhere in west Texas, amid one of the most productive oilfields in the continent, a Canadian company is building a plant that it hopes will eventually suck from the air a million tonnes of carbon being pumped out of the ground all around it.    

New Industry Develops Around Sucking Carbon Dioxide Out Of Atmosphere

6 Men Become 1st To Cross Perilous Drake Passage Unassisted

They dodged icebergs, held their breaths as giant whales breached near their small boat and rode building-sized waves while rowing 24 hours a day toward Antarctica.

6 Men Become 1st To Cross Perilous Drake Passage Unassisted

Trudeau On Climate And Ultra-Rare Disease

Trudeau On Climate And Ultra-Rare Disease
In The News is a roundup of stories from The Canadian Press designed to kickstart your day. Here is what's on the radar of our editors for the morning of Dec. 30.

Trudeau On Climate And Ultra-Rare Disease

Forest Ecologist Nalini Nadkarni Helps Refashion Barbie Dolls As Scientists

SALT LAKE CITY - When Nalini Nadkarni was a kid, she’d run home from school, climb into one of the eight maple trees in her parents’ backyard and spend an afternoon there with an apple and a book.

Forest Ecologist Nalini Nadkarni Helps Refashion Barbie Dolls As Scientists