Politicians, experts demand global cooperation against coronavirus pandemic

World
Politicians, experts demand global cooperation against coronavirus pandemic
As the world is plagued with a spiral of coronavirus infections, politicians and professionals demand global solidarity and cooperation against the pandemic.

"COVID-19 should be a wake-up call about the cooperation which will be needed to make certain that any future pandemic -- particularly one that is even more lethal than the coronavirus -- could be handled most effectively by the international community," Kenneth Quinn, president of the World Food Prize Foundation and former U.S. ambassador to Cambodia, told Xinhua in a recently available interview.

A lot more than 30,000 COVID-19 deaths have already been reported worldwide, based on the latest data from Johns Hopkins University's Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE).

Quinn, who had a 32-year career as a U.S. diplomat, said the pandemic "offers a distinctive opportunity" for Beijing and Washington to cooperate.

"The two most significant countries on our world in terms of scientific expertise and research capacity ought to be partners in ensuring human triumph over the risk of a devastating global cataclysm," he stressed.

By Saturday afternoon, there have been a lot more than 121,000 confirmed cases in america, with 2,010 deaths, an interactive map maintained by the CSSE showed.

Quinn's remarks on the urgency of U.S.-China collaboration against the disease were echoed by Nicholas Platt, who served as U.S. Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Pakistan, Philippines, Zambia, and as a high-level diplomat in various countries including China.

"The doctors in america understand and agree with doctors in China about the virus and what to do about any of it," he said. "We have to be learning as much about each other and exchanging as much information as we are able to."

Wafaa El-Sadr, director of the Global Health Initiative and ICAP at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health, said that by strengthening collaboration on various fronts such as for example scientific research, China and the United States can contribute to tackling major global public health threats.

Kent Pinkerton, professor of the University of California Davis School of Medicine, listed three priorities for boosting cooperation: sharing of scientific breakthroughs to lessen the spread of the coronavirus; sharing methods for the treating patients with extreme symptoms of the infection; and dissemination of new research information.

Zhang Zuofeng, professor of epidemiology and associate dean for research at the institution of Public Health at the University of California, Los Angeles, said that enhancing cooperation will help find more efficient answers to the crisis, develop vaccines and therapies for COVID-19, and improve prevention mechanism of new infectious diseases.

The pandemic has swept a lot more than 200 countries and regions, showed the most recent data on the website of the World Health Organization (WHO).

According to the Extraordinary G20 Leaders' Summit Statement on COVID-19, combatting this pandemic calls for a transparent, robust, coordinated, large-scale and science-based global response in the spirit of solidarity.

"We are strongly focused on presenting a united front from this common threat," said the statement, adding that the group can do whatever it takes to overcome the pandemic.
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