76.59 F
New York, US
June 11, 2026
PreetNama
English News

US Vice President Kamala Harris to tell UN body it’s time to prepare for next pandemic: Report

Vice President Kamala Harris will make the case before United Nations members on Monday that now is the time for global leaders to begin putting the serious work into how they will respond to the next global pandemic.

The virtual address, Harris’ second to a UN body since her inauguration, will come as the United States makes progress on vaccinating the public and much of the world struggles to acquire vaccines.

“At the same time that the world works to get through this pandemic, we also know that we must prepare for the next,” Harris will say, according to excerpts of the speech obtained by The Associated Press. The speech will be co-hosted by UN. permanent representatives of Argentina, Japan, Norway and South Africa.

The Biden administration will mark its first 100 days in office this week. President Joe Biden is scheduled to address Congress on Wednesday and is certain to highlight the headway his administration has made in responding to the worst public health crisis in the US in more than a country

Harris, according to the excerpts, will broadly outline how the administration thinks the US and other nations should consider focusing their attention. The steps include improving accessibility to health systems, investing in science, health workers and the well-being of women, and surging capacity for personal protective equipment and vaccine and test manufacturing.

Harris says much has been learned over the last year about pandemic preparedness and response but that it would be unwise to rest easy.

“We have been reminded that the status quo is not nearly good enough, and that innovation is indeed the path forward,” Harris says.

Biden’s ambassador to the UN, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, is also scheduled to deliver remarks at Monday’s virtual event.

Related posts

Coronavirus update: COVID-19 has affected more than 64,000 people globally

On Punjab

US-hosted, India-led summit identifies ransomware as major cybersecurity threatRansomware is an escalating global cybersecurity threat with “serious economic and security consequences”, said a group of 30 countries in a joint statement on Thursday after a key virtual meeting hosted by the US. India, Germany, Australia and the UK played a leading role in organising the two-day talks. The joint statement on cybersecurity said governments “recognise the need for urgent action, common priorities and complementary efforts to reduce the risk of ransomware”. The participating countries also said efforts will be made to improve network resilience; address the abuse of financial mechanisms to launder ransom payments or conduct other activities that make ransomware profitable; and to disrupt the ransomware ecosystem via law enforcement collaboration and diplomatic engagement. On the need to show resilience against ransomware attacks – the discussions on which were led by India at the summit on cybersecurity – the statement said efforts will be made to address it not just as a technical issue but as one that “requires effective policy frameworks, appropriate resources, clear governance structures, transparent incident response procedures, a ready workforce, partnership with the private sector, and consistently enforced legal and regulatory regimes”.

On Punjab

Pakistan’s ex-president Pervez Musharraf set to return to politics

On Punjab