In the whole world, Africa's Covid case, astonishingly very low till now, but the West are still leading by great margin. And again and again so many times I have heard/read that so many whites are blaming the west for not donating the vaccine to Africa. This is very painful, when will Africa be safe out of their aid and scrutiny?
Still they are failed to put the reason why Africa's covid case become so minimal. Is it genetic or geographical differences? By the way who will trust them? Nobody knows their scheme. Letting the whole Africans to vultures is sickening. We know they don't want to see Africa's progress. Their sinister agenda is made clear by becoming an obstacle to countries who are making significant progress, Ethiopia is good example.
Once I remember they asked me in my country to be vaccinated. And I totally rejected their offer, as result asking me the reason. I told them how I scared the the side effect of the vaccine and adding I will be fine and don't need any medication.
Please leave us and allow us to sustain ourselves. We don't need your aid!!
After all we are not poor.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... right-jack
Rich countries have administered more doses of Covid vaccine than the size of their populations – an average of 105 doses per 100 people. In low-income countries, that figure is just two per 100 people. It is a disparity that is likely to define the post-pandemic world.
There has been much discussion about the inequalities that Covid has exposed both within nations and between them. Paradoxically, though, it is now that we are beginning to get the virus under control that inequalities may become most exposed.
There is little possibility that the virus will be eradicated. Rather, it is likely to become endemic but contained in most western nations. The efficacy of vaccines will enable people in richer countries to “live with the virus”. Not so in poorer nations. The 30 poorest countries in the world, with a combined population of almost a billion, have vaccinated on average barely 2% of their population. In the Democratic Republic of the Congo the figure is 0.1%, in Haiti 0.24%, in Chad 0.27%, in Tanzania 0.36%. “Living with the virus” will mean something very different in such countries than it will in the west.