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GENEVA - After three years of intense negotiations, member states of the World Health Organization (WHO) are on the verge of finalizing a groundbreaking treaty to strengthen global pandemic preparedness, according to sources close to the talks. The discussions, which continued through Friday night into Saturday morning (April 12), have been temporarily paused until Tuesday as officials work to resolve remaining sticking points.
The proposed legally-binding agreement represents a coordinated international effort to prevent future health crises like COVID-19, which claimed millions of lives between 2020 and 2022. A WHO spokesperson confirmed that while significant progress has been made, some critical issues require additional discussion time.
"Negotiations ran continuously until 9am Saturday but couldn't quite cross the finish line," revealed one Geneva-based participant in the closed-door meetings. Another diplomatic source noted that "substantial progress was achieved with nearly all treaty provisions agreed upon - only a few vital matters remain unresolved."
The path to this potential agreement hasn't been smooth. Last year's deadline passed without resolution despite multiple extended negotiation sessions. However, optimism grew when the negotiating body's co-chair recently told AFP that members had reached an "in-principle" understanding.
The United States' participation in these critical talks ended abruptly earlier this year following an executive order by newly inaugurated President Donald Trump that withdrew American membership from WHO and prohibited engagement in pandemic treaty discussions.
For the remaining 192 WHO member nations involved in negotiations, adoption of any final agreement would remain voluntary - each government maintaining sovereign authority over whether to ratify and implement its provisions domestically.
Key Challenges Remain
The most persistent disagreement centers on equitable distribution mechanisms for vaccines and treatments between developed and developing nations - seeking solutions to problems that became painfully apparent during COVID-19 vaccine rollouts.
`The entire negotiation process has faced criticism from various political commentators across several Western nations who argue such agreements could compromise national decision-making authority by granting excessive power to an international organization. These concerns have occasionally spilled into public demonstrations outside meeting venues.
`During this week's Geneva session,a handful protesters gathered near conference facilities holding provocative signs including one depicting a serpent coiled around WHO's emblem with text questioning:"WHO ARE YOU TO TAKE AWAY MY FREEDOMS?!"
`A Potential Landmark Achievement
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Successful conclusion would mark only second binding treaty established under WHO auspices since organization’s founding seventy-five years ago—following adoption Framework Convention Tobacco Control back two decades ago.Public health experts consider current effort particularly significant given recent global experience devastating coronavirus outbreak.
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"This accord represents our best opportunity ensure world never again faces catastrophic unpreparedness witnessed during COVID crisis," stated Dr.Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus,director-general agency responding critics."It about strengthening-not diminishing-national capacities respond health emergencies."
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