No Comment from White House on Lifting Ban on Vaccine Raw Materials
Export to India
The White House on Monday did not respond to questions on
the request by Serum Institute of India to lift export ban on certain raw materials
needed for ramping up production of Covid-19 vaccine.
The question in this regard was asked twice on Monday —
once during the morning White House briefing on Covid-19 and later during the
daily news conference by White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki.
“The Serum
Institute of India has been saying that the Biden administration is blocking
exports of raw materials that it needs to make Covid
vaccines, and the Serum Institute has also urged President Biden to lift that
embargo. So I wanted to ask which raw materials are at issue here?
And do you have any plans to address Serum’s concerns?” asked a reporter during
the morning news conference by the White House Covid-19 Response Team.
Both Dr Anthony Fauci, Director at the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases and Dr Andy Slacitt,
the White House Covid-19 response senior advisor, said they had no answer.
“Let us get back
to you. Suffice to say we are taking very seriously the global threat from the
pandemic. We’ve been a leader in the funding of COVAX, have done several
bilateral transfers of vaccines, and are looking very hard and taking very
seriously all of these complex issues, we'll get back to you on the specifics,”
Slavitt said.
A similar question was asked during the daily news
conference.
“India is facing a critical shortage of raw materials
necessary to make vaccines. And officials there are urging the US to lift
embargo on exporting those raw materials. My colleagues in India are reporting
today that the Biden administration recently told India that its request was
being considered and would be acted ‘at the earliest’. Could you provide some
more details on that and maybe some timeline?” a reporter asked Psaki.
In response Psaki referred to a recent speech at WTO by
US Trade Representative Katherine Tai.
“The significant inequities we are seeing in access to
vaccines between developed and developing countries are completely
unacceptable. Extraordinary times require extraordinary leadership,
communication, and creativity,” she said.
“We, of course, are working with WTO members on a global
response to Covid. That includes a number of
components, whether it’s the $4-billion commitment to COVAX, or discussions
about how we can aid and assist countries that need help the most.” “But our
focus is on determining the most effective steps that will help get the
pandemic under control. We don’t have anything further in terms of next steps
or a timeline, but we are considering a range of options,” Psaki said.