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US, Canada, And France Express Full Support For WHO Pandemic Treaty

Unelected bureaucrats back plans to give the WHO increased powers.

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Since the start of the Covid pandemic, powerful institutions have been using it as an opportunity to usher in more surveillance and speech control.

One of these institutions, the WHO, an unelected global health agency, has spent more than a year pushing to expand its powers via two instruments โ€” a pandemic treaty/accord and amendments to the International Health Regulations (2005). These instruments will collectively give the WHO, an unelected health agency, new powers to target โ€œmisinformation,โ€ grow its surveillance tools, and push a framework for global vaccine passports.

And last month, during a roundtable at the seventy-sixth World Health Assembly (WHA), the annual meeting of the WHOโ€™s decision-making body, US Secretary of Health and Human Service Xavier Becerra (an unelected bureaucrat who was appointed by President Joe Biden with the consent of the US Senate), Canadaโ€™s Chief Public Health Officer Theresa Tam (an unelected bureaucrat who was appointed by former-Canadian Health Minister Jane Philpott), and others gave the instruments their full backing.

Becerra said that the US is committed to the work of the WHOโ€™s intergovernmental negotiating body (INB) (the group thatโ€™s responsible for drafting and negotiating the pandemic treaty), the International Health Regulations (IHR) amendments, the strengthening of โ€œbiosurveillance and data systems for early warning to biological threats,โ€ and the enhancement of โ€œequity in pandemic preparedness and responses.โ€

He also noted that US President Joe Bidenโ€™s budget proposal for 2024 includes โ€œa multi-billion dollar investment to make sure Americaโ€™s prepared for โ€œthe next public health crisisโ€ and $1.6 billion for โ€œglobal health action.โ€

Additionally, Becerra touted the Biden administrationโ€™s commitment to the Pandemic Fund โ€” a fund thatโ€™s hosted by the World Bank (a global financial institution that provides loans and grants to low and middle-income countries), has the WHO as a technical lead, and provides pandemic prevention and preparedness funding to low-and-middle-income countries.

Becerra pointed to the Biden regimeโ€™s previous $450 million commitment to the Pandemic Fund, highlighted an additional $250 million commitment to the fund that the Biden admin had recently made, and said โ€œmore investment is needed.โ€

Tam said that itโ€™s โ€œabsolutely amazing to have the chairs of the INB and the IHR reviewโ€ and that Canada is โ€œcommitted to taking a collaborative approach with multiple partners on shared health priorities.โ€ Additionally, she said that the โ€œWHO should absolutely be at the center and playing a really critical role in this global health architecture.โ€

Franceโ€™s representative expressed full commitment to the โ€œpandemic agreementโ€ and the IHR amendments and said that both are โ€œvital.โ€ She also said France supports the pandemic treaty being guided by One Health โ€” a WHO surveillance system that uses links between โ€œthe health of people, animals and ecosystemsโ€ to โ€œcreate new surveillance and disease control methods.โ€

Not only did representatives from several nations commit to the WHOโ€™s power grab via the pandemic treaty and IHR amendments but Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the WHOโ€™s Director-General, pushed member states to support these measures and other forms of increased surveillance throughout the seventy-sixth WHA.

During the opening of this yearโ€™s WHA, Dr. Tedros said: โ€œThe pandemic accordโ€ฆmust be a historic agreement to make a paradigm shift in global health security.โ€

During his live remarks at the seventy-sixth WHA, the WHO Director-General discussed how the WHO is expanding its surveillance and monitoring systems, urged members to adopt the IHR amendments and the pandemic accord, and called for members to provide more funding to the WHO.

And during the roundtable where WHO member states supported the treaty and IHR amendments, Dr. Tedros urged member states to deliver the pandemic treaty โ€œon time,โ€ told them to focus on โ€œbold amendmentsโ€ to the IHR, thanked the US for recommending that member states start amending the IHR, and urged member states to โ€œkeep WHO at the center of the global health architecture.โ€

In addition to member states and the WHO Director-General praising the pandemic treaty and IHR amendments, the WHO also published several documents about increased WHO surveillance and โ€œmanagementโ€ of information that the WHO deems to be โ€œfalse or misleadingโ€ during the seventy-sixth WHA.

One of these documents, โ€œStrengthening WHO preparedness for and response to health emergencies,โ€ contains plans for โ€œcollaborative surveillanceโ€ and โ€œinfodemic managementโ€ (infodemic is a WHO buzzword that describes โ€œtoo much information including false or misleading information in digital and physical environments during a disease outbreak.โ€)

Another of these documents, โ€œWHOโ€™s work in health emergencies,โ€ outlines the WHOโ€™s plans to expand One Health as part of a five-year plan between 2022 and 2026.

And in a document titled โ€œImplementation of resolution WHA75.11 (2022),โ€ the WHO noted that it โ€œcontinues to support the response to coronavirus disease (COVID-19) by strengthening surveillance.โ€

As it pushes for increased powers, the WHO has also demanded that member states, many of which are experiencing difficult economic conditions at home, provide hundreds of millions of dollars in additional funding to this unelected health agency.

And member states complied with these demands by agreeing to pay an additional 20% to the WHO in 2024-2025 at the seventy-sixth WHA. Member states are already set to pay the WHO more than $950 million in dues for 2022-2023 so this 20% increase represents an increase of almost $200 million. Plus, member states already paid more than $270 million in voluntary contributions for 2020-2021.

While the current version of the pandemic treaty doesnโ€™t include a specific budget for the implementation of the treaty, it does require WHO member states to establish funding mechanisms to support the treatyโ€™s implementation. Previous versions of the treaty proposed that WHO member states pay billions of additional dollars per year to various projects.

The WHO intends to finalize the pandemic treaty and IHR amendments by May 2024.

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