The WHO's Pandemic Treaty
We must oppose this to maintain national sovereignty and democratic norms.
The WHO recently announced plans for an international pandemic treaty tied to a digital passport and digital ID system. Meeting in December 2021 in a special session for only the second time since the WHO’s founding in 1948, the Health Assembly of the WHO adopted a single decision titled, “The World Together.” The WHO plans to finalize the treaty by 2024. It will aim to shift governing authority now reserved to sovereign states to the WHO during a pandemic by legally binding member states to the WHO’s revised International Health Regulations.
In January of 2022 the United States submitted proposed amendments to the 2005 International Health Regulations, which bind all 194 UN member states, which the WHO director general accepted and forwarded to other member states. In contrast to amendments to our own constitution, these amendments will not require a two-thirds vote of our Senate, but a simple majority of the member states. Most of the public is wholly unaware of these changes, which will impact the national sovereignty of member states.
The proposed amendments include, among others, the following. Among the changes the WHO will no longer need to consult with the state or attempt to obtain verification from the state where a reported event of concern (e.g., a new outbreak) is allegedly occurring before taking action on the basis of such reports (Article 9.1). In addition to the authority to make the determination of a public health emergency of international concern under Article 12, the WHO will be granted additional powers to determine a public health emergency of regional concern, as well as a category referred to as an intermediate health alert.
The relevant state no longer needs to agree with the WHO Director General’s determination that an event constitutes a public health emergency of international concern. A new Emergency Committee will be constituted at the WHO, which the Director-General will consult in lieu of the state within whose territory the public health emergency of international concern has occurred, to declare the emergency over. The amendments will also give “regional directors” within the WHO, rather than elected representatives of the relevant states, the legal authority to declare a Public Health Emergency of Regional Concern.
Also, when an event does not meet criteria for a public health emergency of international concern but the WHO Director-General determines it requires heightened awareness and a potential international public health response, he may determine at any time to issue an “intermediate public health alert” to states and consult the WHO’s Emergency Committee. The criteria for this category are simple fiat: “the Director-General has determined it requires heightened international awareness and a potential international public health response.”
Through these amendments, the WHO, with the support of the U.S., appears to be responding to roadblocks that China erected in the early days of covid. This is a legitimate concern. But the net effect of the proposed amendments is a shift of power away from sovereign states, ours included, to unelected bureaucrats at the WHO. The thrust of every one of the changes is toward increased powers and centralized powers delegated to the WHO and away from member states.
Leslyn Lewis, a member of the Canadian parliament and lawyer with international experience, has warned that the treaty would also allow the WHO unilaterally to determine what constitutes a pandemic and declare when a pandemic is occurring. “We would end up with a one-size-fits-all approach for the entire world,” she cautioned. Under the proposed WHO plan, pandemics need not be limited to infectious diseases and could include, for example, a declared obesity crisis.
As part of this plan the WHO has contracted German-based Deutsche Telekom subsidiary T-Systems to develop a global vaccine passport system, with plans to link every person on the planet to a QR code digital ID. “Vaccination certificates that are tamper-proof and digitally verifiable build trust. WHO is therefore supporting member states in building national and regional trust networks and verification technology,” explained Garret Mehl, head of the WHO’s Department of Digital Health and Innovation. “The WHO’s gateway service also serves as a bridge between regional systems. It can also be used as part of future vaccination campaigns and home-based records.” This system will be universal, mandatory, trans-national, and operated by unelected bureaucrats in a captured NGO who already bungled the covid pandemic response.
And the WHO's own data shows that Sweden and Japan, two nations WITHOUT vaccine mandates, significantly did better in terms of All-Cause mortality outcomes (lower!) than the nations which Bill Gates and the WHO would model their pandemic policies after. But even nations that were more restrictive than Sweden but far less than the USA, China, and Australia, still out-performed the USA-Fauci-Gates model by a considerable margin: Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Ireland, to start.
So why would the public health officials in these nations want to surrender their sovereignty? Obviously, NOT in the best interests of their citizens.
I expect we will see some push back on this from some nations in Europe, and from Japan, Singapore, and South Korea, to start. It would be insanity to follow the WHO-Gates lead. Gates might have bought WHO -- but he hasn't bought Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Norway, Japan, etc.
We'll see. But yes, the proposal is ridiculously bad.
If Gates had wanted to fight Covid and believed that the vaccines were key, he could have Open-Sourced one of the vaccines. The Gates Foundation has that kind of money. Instead, he refused to do exactly that: in fact, the vaccines were profitable to his "philanthropy." It seems this was always about power for him, and never about better public health outcomes.
I miss mean tweets (helps I’ve never been on Twitter)........ and fed babies, lower emissions, affordable food, thriving startups, affordable gas, kids not damaged by 2 years of masks, the federal government not funding insane ideology in schools and paper pusher trainings, international stability, and not fighting Putin in barely proxy wars to the last dead “-------ian”