Indonesia finally blinks, buckling under pressure from the global community. After three months of negotiations with the World Health Organization (WHO), Indonesia finally surrenders to the global health body its precious H5N1 samples for vaccine development and production. Earlier, this Southeast Asian country from where 74 people have died of bird flu, had dug in its heels and refused to release samples, citing the fear that large pharmaceutical companies would use the virus to make vaccines that would be unaffordable to developing countries.
But Indonesia changed its mind. Whatever happened to Indonesia’s brave attempt to stand up for its fellow-third world countries until WHO addresses this pressing concern?
After all, WHO did not give any concrete assurance of how it would ensure that cash-strapped countries would benefit equally with cash-rich nations when time for handing out the fruits of sample-sharing.
Muted for reasons unclear, Indonesia held out, gave in: Did its cry for fairness register? Unless WHO presents clearly how the H5N1 study results will be shared, Indonesia’s efforts may very well all go to waste. And sad but true—even if the power struggle between super power and third world had ended in stalemate, Indonesia, with its impoverished majority, may likely be incapable of taking advantage of the vaccines once effective ones are developed.
“Previously, WHO used a mechanism that was not fair for developing countries,” Siti Fadilah Supari, the health minister, said at a March 27 press conference in Jakarta. “This mechanism was not fair and transparent in terms of the expectations of developing countries. We think that mechanism was more dangerous than the threat of pandemic H5N1 itself.” See full story on FluRadar
Not fair? Not transparent? Has this mechanism, this system been changed that Indonesia finally gave in? Is the “danger” no longer present? The danger is still there, and the glaring disparity still gnaws on the inadequate resources of developing countries. This imbalance will persist if the international community continues to feed it.
Consider WHO’s statement:
“H5N1 vaccines are a different issue,” said Dr. David Heymann, WHO assistant director-general for communicable diseases. “We will now modify our best practices to ensure that they are transparent to the developing countries which are providing samples and which have requested to share in the benefits resulting from those viruses.”
Can an assurance to modify an age-old system grant Indonesia the medical stockpile it needs when the next pandemic comes?
Heymann’s assurance of transparency comes out only as convenient, a pat on the back, a mere consolation, a feeble effort for WHO at best. From WHO, we need concrete action plans on how third world countries will gain more of the fruits of their sample-sharing and other bird-flu related endeavors.