Some Air New Zealand crew members arriving back in New Zealand are isolating at Auckland’s Hotel Grand Windsor, with taxpayers footing the bill. But the arrangement is “currently under review”, according to a managed isolation and…
Category Archives: headline
Driver to be charged over Arrowtown teen's crash death
Police have finished their investigation into a crash near Arrowtown last year which killed 17-year-old Allanah Walker and intend to charge a woman over the teen’s death.Miss Walker (17) died, and two others were injured, in the…
Government scrapping Resource Management Act to tackle the housing crisis
New Zealand’s tired and failing master act for the environment will be scrapped and replaced with new laws, helping tackle a spiralling housing crisis and climate-change threats.In one of the largest regulatory shake-ups in New…
Review into Let's Get Wellington Moving to be made public
An internal review, or “health check”, of Wellington’s $6.4 billion transport project will be publicly released this month following what’s being described as a frustrating delay.In September last year Let’s Get Wellington Moving…
Covid-19 Minister Chris Hipkins rules out piggy-backing off Australia for vaccines
More than 2000 health workers are being trained and mobilised, nine ultra-cold freezers are being prepped and specialist cold chain containers are on order in anticipation of the first wave of Covid-19 vaccines landing on our shores.It…
Holi cancelled: Wellington misses out on colourful festival
Wellington’s Holi festival has been cancelled this year because organisers were unable to import the special coloured powders used for the event, but celebrations are still going ahead in Auckland and Christchurch. Nevertheless,…
Herald morning quiz: February 11
Test your brains with the Herald’s morning quiz. Be sure to check back on nzherald.co.nz at 3pm for the afternoon quiz.
Mistaken identity murder: Police identify suspects in 'execution style' death of Tauranga man David Kuka
Police investigating the murder of David Kuka – an innocent man who was the victim of mistaken identity – are circling a specific pool of suspects believed to have committed the “execution style” slaying.Today marks the third anniversary…
Tsunami activity warning for NZ coastal areas after 7.7 earthquake near New Caledonia
TSUNAMI WARNING LATEST: • Authorities have issued a tsunami advisory for coastal parts of NZ, predominantly in Northland• It follows a 7.7 earthquake near New Caledonia at 2.20am this morning• Civil Defence says…
COVID-19 vaccine race, we win together or lose together
GENEVA — “Of the 128 million vaccine doses administered so far, more than three quarters of those vaccinations are in just 10 countries that account for 60 percent of the global GDP,” according to the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
“As of February 10, almost 130 countries, with 2.5 billion people, are yet to administer a single dose,” according to a press release from WHO and UNICEF. “This self-defeating strategy will cost lives and livelihoods; give the virus further opportunity to mutate and evade vaccines; and will undermine a global economic recovery.
“UNICEF and WHO – partners for more than 70 years – call on leaders to look beyond their borders and employ a vaccine strategy that can actually end the pandemic and limit variants.
“Health workers have been on the frontlines of the pandemic in lower- and middle-income settings and should be protected first so they can protect us.
“COVAX participating countries are preparing to receive and use vaccines. Health workers have been trained, cold chain systems primed. What’s missing is the equitable supply of vaccines.
“To ensure that vaccine rollouts begin in all countries in the first 100 days of 2021, it is imperative that:
• Governments that have vaccinated their own health workers and populations at highest risk of severe disease share vaccines through COVAX so other countries can do the same.
• The Access to COVID-19 Tools (ACT) Accelerator, and its vaccines pillar COVAX, is fully funded so that financing and technical support is available to lower- and middle-income countries for deploying and administering vaccines. If fully funded, the ACT Accelerator could return up to US$ 166 for every dollar invested.
• Vaccine manufacturers allocate the limited vaccine supply equitably; share safety, efficacy and manufacturing data as a priority with WHO for regulatory and policy review; step up and maximize production; and transfer technology to other manufacturers who can help scale the global supply.
“We need global leadership to scale up vaccine production and achieve vaccine equity.
“COVID-19 has shown that our fates are inextricably linked. Whether we win or lose, we will do so together.”
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