Saudi Press

Saudi Arabia and the world
Monday, Nov 03, 2025

Europe will not be safe from COVID-19 until the world is safe

Europe will not be safe from COVID-19 until the world is safe

It’s going to take a global effort to fight this pandemic, and the ones that are sure to follow.

Last week, the pandemic receded in Europe. It is far from over, but there were fewer cases, fewer hospitalizations, fewer deaths and more vaccinations. That’s the good news. But the bad news is that on a global scale, last week was one of the deadliest so far. And Europe will not be safe from COVID-19 until the world is safe from COVID-19.

European nations and institutions therefore have a triple responsibility. First, they must finish the work they have started: vaccinate their populations, keep public health measures in place in line with levels of infection, and only carefully loosen restrictions when public health advisors agree. As we know too well now, loosening too soon results in yet another wave. Across the Continent, and including in the U.K., travel arrangements for the summer need to be organized bearing this in mind.

Second, there is an imperative to help the rest of the world bring the disease under control. This is not just a moral necessity. It is also vital for Europe’s health security. The mutations of the disease, and their transmissibility, mean that commitment to a global response represents realism, not just idealism. Every European citizen needs to be vaccinated. But so do people in less prosperous parts of the world.

There is an immediate need for the redistribution of vaccines from high income countries, who have what they require to cover their populations, to lower and middle-income countries. Developing countries also need support for distribution of the vaccines — because the cost of effective distribution can be five times that of production.

Third, Europe’s leaders must help build an international system of preparedness and response to prevent the next pandemic. Without European engagement, the likelihood is that inertia will triumph. Eleven reports in the last 20 years have recommended changes to the system. They were largely ignored, and the result has been the global disaster of COVID-19. We need to do much better next time — and every expert agrees there will be a next time, a new pathogen with pandemic potential.

The Independent Panel on Pandemic Preparedness and Response, on which we both serve, was asked by the World Health Assembly to find out what went wrong that allowed a viral outbreak in Wuhan to become the worst pandemic in a century, and to make recommendations to strengthen the world’s defenses against future threats.

Our diagnosis is unsparing: In our final report published today, we say that preparation was too weak, detection and alert too slow, early response too meek and the sustained response too unequal. There was complacency where the world needed precaution, denial in place of action, hoping for the best rather than acting in case of the worst.

Business as usual is the enemy. So, starting at the World Health Assembly on May 24, European negotiators should argue in every session that business as usual is over. There are many priorities, but four are essential, and Europe has distinctive experience with all four.

One: Pandemic preparedness and response belongs in the hands of presidents and prime ministers before a crisis strikes, not just after. That is why we propose a Global Health Threats Council, at head of government level, to apply political pressure and accountability in pandemic prevention.

This Global Council needs money to have muscle. We propose an international finance facility that has guaranteed funding for 10 to 15 years. This would fund annual preparedness efforts focused on national and global “public goods” — investments in surveillance capacity, including genomic sequencing capacity, where the benefit is for all not just for the country who pays. It would also fund “surge” financing in the case of a future pandemic. Both have been sorely lacking during COVID-19.

Two: Preparedness involves surveillance and simulations but also pre-positioning of institutions and finance. The Access to COVID-19 Tools Accelerator (ACT-A) is designed to play catchup in the global search for vaccines, diagnostics, and therapeutics. It needs to be able to prepare the entire world for the next pandemic.

Three: The World Health Organization has been under-powered and under-resourced for the tasks it has been given. This will only change if its staff have more independence from national politics. Europe has experience in creating the European Commission and European Central Bank, institutions where independence is a founding premise of the organizations. We need a WHO able to hold countries to account.

That means guaranteed finance, not annual begging for funds. It means investigatory powers on the scale of the International Atomic Energy Agency. It means seven-year terms for the most senior officials — non-renewable so they are not subject to outside pressure.

Four: We need change to the system of detection and global alert. The existing system failed during the “lost month” of February 2020, when business as usual continued in most countries — despite January’s declaration of a global public health emergency.

Multilateralism has been in retreat in recent years, with nationalism on the rise, countries looking inwards and geopolitical tensions rising. The EU is vital to creating global solutions, and it should support the far-reaching changes the Independent Panel is proposing, to confront a problem of planetary scale.

Newsletter

Related Articles

Saudi Press
0:00
0:00
Close
Saudi Arabia to Host First-Ever International WrestleMania in 2027
Saudi Arabia to Host New ATP Masters Tournament from 2028
Trump Doubts Saudi Demand for Palestinian State Before Israel Normalisation
Viral ‘Sky Stadium’ for Saudi Arabia’s 2034 World Cup Debunked as AI-Generated
Deal Between Saudi Arabia and Israel ‘Virtually Impossible’ This Year, Kingdom Insider Says
Saudi Crown Prince to Visit Washington While Israel Recognition Remains Off-Table
Saudi Arabia Poised to Channel Billions into Syria’s Reconstruction as U.S. Sanctions Linger
Smotrich’s ‘Camels’ Remark Tests Saudi–Israel Normalisation Efforts
Saudi Arabia and Qatar Gain Structural Edge in Asian World Cup Qualification
Israeli Energy Minister Delays $35 Billion Gas Export Agreement with Egypt
Fincantieri and Saudi Arabia Agree to Build Advanced Maritime Ecosystem in Kingdom
Saudi Arabia’s HUMAIN Accelerates AI Ambitions Through Major Partnerships and Infrastructure Push
IOC and Saudi Arabia End Ambitious 12-Year Esports Games Partnership
CSL Seqirus Signs Saudi Arabia Pact to Provide Cell-Based Flu Vaccines and Build Local Production
Qualcomm and Saudi Arabia’s HUMAIN Team Up to Deploy 200 MW AI Infrastructure
Saudi Arabia’s Economy Expands Five Percent in Third Quarter Amid Oil Output Surge
China’s Vice President Han Zheng Meets Saudi Crown Prince as Trade Concerns Loom
Saudi Arabia Unveils Vision for First-Ever "Sky Stadium" Suspended Over Desert Floor
Francis Ford Coppola Auctions Luxury Watches After Self-Financed Film Flop
US and Qatar Warn EU of Trade and Energy Risks from Tough Climate Regulation
‘No Kings’ Protests Inflate Numbers — But History Shows Nations Collapse Without Strong Executive Power
Ofcom Rules BBC’s Gaza Documentary ‘Materially Misleading’ Over Narrator’s Hamas Ties
"The Tsunami Is Coming, and It’s Massive": The World’s Richest Man Unveils a New AI Vision
Yachts, Private Jets, and a Picasso Painting: Exposed as 'One of the Largest Frauds in History'
AI and Cybersecurity at Forefront as GITEX Global 2025 Kicks Off in Dubai
EU Deploys New Biometric Entry/Exit System: What Non-EU Travelers Must Know
Ex-Microsoft Engineer Confirms Famous Windows XP Key Was Leaked Corporate License, Not a Hack
China’s lesson for the US: it takes more than chips to win the AI race
Israel and Hamas Agree to First Phase of Trump-Brokered Gaza Truce, Hostages to Be Freed
The Davos Set in Decline: Why the World Economic Forum’s Power Must Be Challenged
Wave of Complaints Against Apple Over iPhone 17 Pro’s Scratch Sensitivity
Syria Holds First Elections Since Fall of Assad
Altman Says GPT-5 Already Outpaces Him, Warns AI Could Automate 40% of Work
Trump Organization Teams with Saudi Developer on $1 Billion Trump Plaza in Jeddah
Electronic Arts to Be Taken Private in Historic $55 Billion Buyout
Colombian President Petro Vows to Mobilize Volunteers for Gaza and Joins List of Fighters
Nvidia and Abu Dhabi’s TII Launch First AI-&-Robotics Lab in the Middle East
UK, Canada, and Australia Officially Recognise Palestine in Historic Shift
New Eye Drops Show Promise in Replacing Reading Glasses for Presbyopia
Dubai Property Boom Shows Strain as Flippers Get Buyer’s Remorse
Top AI Researchers Are Heading Back to China as U.S. Struggles to Keep Pace
JWST Data Brings TRAPPIST-1e Closer to Earth-Like Habitability
UAE-US Stargate Project Poised to Make Abu Dhabi a Global AI Powerhouse
Trump and Starmer Clash Over UK Recognition of Palestinian State Amid State Visit
Saudi Arabia cracks down on music ‘lounges’ after conservative backlash
Saudi Arabia Signs ‘Strategic Mutual Defence’ Pact with Pakistan, Marking First Arab State to Gain Indirect Access to Nuclear Strike Capabilities in the Region
Sam Altman sells the 'Wedding Estate' in Hawaii for 49 million dollars
Turkish car manufacturer Togg Enters German Market with 5-Star Electric Sedan and SUV to Challenge European EV Brands
World’s Longest Direct Flight China Eastern to Launch 29-Hour Shanghai–Buenos Aires Direct Flight via Auckland in December
New OpenAI Study Finds Majority of ChatGPT Use Is Personal, Not Professional
×