With tens of millions of lives at stake amid a speedy unfold of COVID-19, Indian-American Congressman Ro Khanna stated he hoped President Joe Biden would name the Pfizer CEO to let India produce its vaccine not less than for six months or a 12 months.
Khanna, who represents Silicon Valley within the US House of Representatives, has been an ardent supporter of the transfer by India and South Africa on the World Trade Organization (WTO) for Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) waiver of COVID-19 vaccines.
“Allow India to develop that vaccine, and this is good in your own long-term interests. It’s good for the United States and our interests with the role with India and the rest of the world,” Khanna advised the media.
Major pharma corporations like Pfizer and Moderna and organisations just like the US Chambers of Commerce are opposing such a transfer.
A day earlier, US Trade Representative Katherine Tai spoke with the CEOs of Pfizer and AstraZeneca relating to the TRIPS waiver, which is slated to come back up earlier than the WTO on May 5.
“I do know there are very senior people in the administration who are supportive of it. We are making the case to the White House. And my hope is that the President would at least call the Pfizer CEO and say, look, your long-term strategy in India, a huge market, just in your economic interest, at least waive it for six months or a year,” Khanna stated.
Microsoft founder and eminent philanthropist Bill Gates in a media interview on Monday opposed the transfer.
Asked about it, Khanna stated, “I rarely think Bill Gates is wrong, but this is a case I hope he will engage. The point that Bill Gates made about manufacturing capacity being restricted is absolutely correct. But what I said is why not have a global fund, USD25 billion, to help with manufacturing capacity and then allow the vaccine recipes to be shared.”
“You’re not going to have a lack of quality control. I think it is patronising to say that 100 other nations can’t have a regulatory process to make sure that manufacturing is safe. They can and the World Health Organization can,” he added.
“No one is asking Pfizer to manufacture these vaccines, no one is saying they need to do it for free. It’s important to understand, they will get paid. They will be able to sell it. The reason they’re not doing it would be pure greed,” Khanna stated.
The United States authorities gave a USD2 billion assure to Pfizer to buy vaccines.
“If it weren’t for that, Pfizer would have never been able to do what they did. Our NIH gave the IP that allowed Moderna to develop the vaccine,” he argued.
“What we’re now saying is that they should share the vaccine recipe with over 100 countries who want to do the manufacturing. They’re willing to do the manufacturing themselves, they need to have contract manufacturing. Pfizer would still get paid. Moderna would still get paid. But it is just wrong, morally wrong, strategically wrong for them not to share the vaccine recipe, which was developed with US taxpayer support,” Khanna additional stated.
He applauded Biden for committing to assist India in its struggle in opposition to the virus.
“But we also ultimately need to get vaccines to India. The president has said that he will release the AstraZeneca vaccine, which Americans are not going to use after it’s deemed safe. But more important is Pfizer and Moderna need to license the vaccine recipe to allow India and other countries to manufacture it,” he added.