China winning more defence grounds against U.S.A., as Bill Gates defends, says criticism of Beijing, WHO a ‘distraction’

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Bill Gates: Second largest donor to WHO behind withdrawn America.

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*Says US handled its COVID-19 response ‘particularly poorly’

 

The supremacy struggle of United States of America under President Donald Trump against the Peoples Republic of China is gaining momentum as world’s richest man, Bill Gates, and other notable figures of the world are beginning to speak in favour of Beijing.

China’s President, Xi Jinping.

Most conspicuous of the latest support China has recorded is particularly that of Gates who looked into America in the face and asked it to stop its China batching.

The Trump-led supremacy struggle has been punctured on the ground that it does not tally with common sense to fight China over its 5G success and globally commended response and victory against Coronavirus pandemic.

“It’s too soon to be talking about whether China deserves blame for the coronavirus outbreak and efforts to shift the focus onto Beijing are a ‘distraction’,” Bill Gates, who criticized ‘incorrect and unfair things’, said about the Communist-run country.

“China did a lot of things right at the beginning, like any country where a virus first shows up”, the Microsoft co-founder told CNN on Sunday.

He added that, “They can look back and say where they missed some things.”

Gates, one of the world’s richest men, said that the US handled its COVID-19 response ‘particularly poorly’ compared to other countries that have minimized the economic damage.

Bill Gates on Sunday defended China and said criticism of the government in Beijing over the coronavirus pandemic is a ‘distraction’.

He claims that criticisms that China lied and covered up the coronavirus is a “distraction”.

“China did a lot of things right at the beginning … they avoided the incredible economic pain … I think there’s a lot of incorrect and unfair things said”.

“You know, some countries did respond very quickly and get their testing in place, and they avoided the incredible economic pain,’ he said.

“It’s sad that even the US that you would have expected to do this well did it particularly poorly.

“But it’s not time to talk about that.”

Gates continued: “This is the time to take the great science we have, the fact we’re in this together, fixed testing, treatments, and get that vaccine, and minimize the trillions of dollars and many things you that you can’t even dimensionalize, in economic terms, that are awful about the situation we’re in.

“So, that’s a distraction.

“I think there’s a lot of incorrect and unfair things said, but it’s not even time for that discussion.”

Unnamed US officials said earlier this month that intelligence agencies were investigating whether coronavirus emerged from a lab in Wuhan, foreign media including Daily Mail reported.

While the American government has ruled out the conspiracy theory that coronavirus was unleashed by China as a bioweapon, some officials have speculated that the pathogen may have been allowed to escape from the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

China has denied this allegation and international governments and agencies say there is no evidence to support the claim from the United States.

The broad scientific consensus holds that SARS-CoV-2, the virus’ official name, originated in bats.

Gates on Sunday also defended the World Health Organization (WHO), the United Nations-run agency that has been accused of being soft on China.

Republicans have been critical of China, saying that it has not been transparent with what it knows about the origins of the coronavirus.

He called the WHO ‘phenomenal’ and said that the US is highly dependent on it.

“In the retrospective, we’ll see things that WHO could have done better, just like every actor in this whole picture,” he said.

“But the WHO has a strong connection with one country. That country is the United States.

“The number of CDC people who are there, people who used to work for the CDC, there’s no UN agency more connected to a country than WHO is to CDC,” Bill Gates revealed.

As of Sunday, the US Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported 928,619 cases of new coronavirus, an increase of 32,853 cases from its previous count, and said the number of deaths had risen by 2,020 to 52,459.

China and the WHO have emerged as the biggest targets of criticism from President Trump, Republican Party officials, and their supporters.

Trump this month announced that the US would cease to provide funding to the WHO and he has made true his vow.

The US President, who once reportedly said he deserved recognition as best performer in the fight against Coronavirus as against the recognition he alleged WHO did to China, was unhappy claiming that the international health organization ‘failed in its basic duty’ in allowing the pandemic to take hold.

Since stepping down as CEO of Microsoft in 2008, Gates has shifted his focus to philanthropy.

He and his wife together run the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Melinda Gates this month slammed Trump’s decision to halt funding to the WHO.

Gates’ philanthropic foundation which he co-chairs with his wife, Melinda, is the second largest donor to the WHO behind the United States.

Announcing an extra $150 million of funding from The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to help speed the development of treatments, vaccines and public health measures to tackle the new coronavirus outbreak, Melinda Gates said the WHO was “exactly the organization that can deal with this pandemic.”

“De-funding the WHO makes absolutely no sense during a pandemic. We need a global coordinated response,’ Melinda Gates told Reuters.

“When you’re in a crisis like this, it’s all hands on deck.”

Melinda Gates said earlier that cutting WHO funding in a health crisis was “as dangerous as it sounds.”

The WHO’s Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said he regretted Trump’s decision.

He said the organization was still assessing the impact and would “try to fill any gaps with partners.”

The philanthropic Gates Foundation’s new $150million commitment brings its COVID-19 funding for the international response to date to $250 million, but Gates said any gap left in the WHO’s funding would be very hard for others to fill.

Alongside support for new diagnostics, drugs and vaccines, the Gates money is primarily aimed at helping poorer countries and vulnerable populations handle the oncoming and spreading pandemic and the poverty it will cause.

“We really as a global community need to address what is now just beginning in African and South Asian countries. We see a huge need, and that’s why we have more than doubled our commitment,” she said.

Praising what she described as ‘heroic work’ by local leaders and healthcare workers in poorer countries seeking to protect vulnerable communities and slow the spread of COVID-19, Melinda Gates said the world’s response to the pandemic “will not be effective unless it is also equitable.”

“Whenever a health crisis hits like this, it’s the people on the margins that it hits the very most,’ she said.


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