The pattern is stingy: Poor countries are sent 5 percent of vaccines

France's president, Emmanuel Makron, has called on Europe and the United States to urgently send 5 percent of coronary vaccines to developing countries. He told the Financial Times that failure to disseminate vaccines would correctly impress global inequality, the Express broadcasts. Until [...]
He told the Financial Times that failure to disseminate vaccines would correctly impress global inequality, the Express broadcasts.
So far, the vast majority of vaccine doses have been provided by high-income states.
Makron presented his plan to address this issue before the virtual G7 summit with world leaders Friday.
The White House has said that American President Joe Biden will pledge a 4 billion dollar donation to fund the global scheme for the distribution of vaccines, known as Covax.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who will lead the meeting, is also expected to share additional doses for the Covax programme.
So far, at least one hundred and ten million people have been infected with the SARS-CoV-2 virus worldwide and over 2.4 million have died, the BBC writes,











