Right Honourable Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
[email protected]
May 1, 2021
Dear Prime Minister Trudeau:
This petition backed by 2000 Canadian supporters, was initiated during the 'first wave' of COVID-19. It contained a respectful request that the Canadian government officially recognize Cuba's medical internationalism at the United Nations. Since last spring Cuban medical teams have treated well over one million coronavirus infected patients in 40 countries on four continents. Canada's grass-roots Nomination of the Cuban medics for the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize was the first to be received by the Oslo Nobel Committee and it has been followed by some 50 other Nominations from every corner of the world. Vaccines offer hope, but we are not out of the woods.
Lessons learned? CANADA-CUBA.
CANADA was ill-prepared for COVID-19. ‘Old’ stocks of Personal Protection Equipment (PPE) had been destroyed prior to the arrival of the coronavirus, and never replenished. In 2018 Canada closed its Global Public Health Intelligence Network (GPHIN) depriving the country (and the world) of an early warning system for global pandemics. In recent decades our political leaders have promoted austerity measures that have whittled away funding for Canada’s health care system, leaving it weaker and us less protected than we should have been.
In 2005 CUBA’s leadership decided to build on their already exemplary health care system. They determined that in this new millennium along with climate change would come an increase in natural disasters and a global acceleration in pandemic outbreaks. Over a period of 15 years Cuba trained thousands of specialized medical responders who would be able to mobilize rapidly on a world-wide basis and did so in response to COVID-19.
CANADA’s professional front-line health workers would have handled the coronavirus challenge better had the deck not been stacked against them from the start. Additional support from pandemic-trained Cuban doctors and nurses could have minimized ‘burnout’ as well as helped save Canadian lives, particularly in isolated Indigenous communities. The advent of new coronavirus variants once again raises the question of some timely CUBAN support for our overextended medical professionals.
While it is understandable that CANADA would want to ensure a coronavirus vaccination for every citizen who wishes one, wealthy countries with easier access to, and the ability to pay for, such pharmaceuticals should be careful in ordering far in excess of their eventual requirements. While G7 countries have on average ordered 4-5 doses (two needed per person), Canada has 9.6 doses on order. Procurement on such a massive scale by wealthy countries crowds out access to vaccines for poor nations. As the September 23, 2020 throne speech concluded: “We cannot eliminate this pandemic in Canada unless we end it everywhere”.
CANADA once had a publicly owned pharmaceutical company (Connaught Labs) that could have developed affordable treatments and vaccines, and thus would have made a difference in the current coronavirus crisis - except that we sold it. It would have come in handy now.
CUBA on the other hand has home grown pharmaceutical companies working on four vaccine candidates. One of them called Soberana 02 is in the third and final stage of testing. Cuba expects to have most of its population vaccinated for COVID-19 by the end of this year, and is working to have millions of low cost doses available to share with other Caribbean and Latin American countries.
Lots we can learn from this island nation!
With the Hon. Bob Rae now installed as Canada's Ambassador to the UN, we ask that your government instruct him to pursue all available international fora to have our country speak to the remarkable world-wide efforts by Cuba's medical internationalism in these trying times.
Sincerely,
Rick Arnold (petition organizer)
784 Packer Road
Roseneath, ON
K0K 2X0
905-352-2430
cc.
Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland -
[email protected]
Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller -
[email protected]
Minister of Health Patty Hajdu -
[email protected]
Chief Public Health Officer of Canada Dr. Theresa Tam -
[email protected]
Premier Brian Pallister -
[email protected]
Chief Medical Officer for Manitoba Dr. Brent Roussin -
[email protected]
Premier Jason Kenney -
[email protected]
Chief Medical Officer for Alberta Dr. Deena Hinshaw -
[email protected]
Premier Scott Moe -
[email protected]
Premier Doug Ford -
[email protected]
Chief Medical Officer for Ontario Dr. David Williams -
[email protected]
Premier John Horgan -
[email protected]
Provincial Health Officer for British Columbia Dr. Bonnie Henry -
[email protected]
Premier Ministre du Quebec Francois Legault -
[email protected]
Directeur National de Santé Publique Dr. Horacio Arruda -
[email protected]