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World leaders demand free coronavirus vaccine for all

World leaders past and present insisted on Thursday (14) that any eventual COVID-19 vaccines and treatments should be made available to everyone, free of charge.

South African president Cyril Ramaphosa and Pakistani prime minister Imran Khan were among more than 140 signatories of a letter saying any vaccine should not be patented while the science should be shared between nations.


The World Health Assembly, the policy-setting body of the UN's World Health Organization, holds its annual general meeting next week.

The signatories called on the WHA to rally behind the cause.

"Governments and international partners must unite around a global guarantee which ensures that, when a safe and effective vaccine is developed, it is produced rapidly at scale and made available for all people, in all countries, free of charge," the letter said.

"The same applies for all treatments, diagnostics, and other technologies for COVID-19."

The letter was signed by Senegalese president Macky Sall and Ghanaian president Nana Akufo-Addo.

Former presidents and prime ministers among the signatories included Shaukat Aziz, Jan Peter Balkenende, Jose Manuel Barroso, Gordon Brown, Helen Clark, Felipe Gonzalez, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Aleksander Kwasniewski, Mary McAleese, Olusegun Obasanjo and Juan Manuel Santos.

The letter comes amid fury in France after pharmaceutical giant Sanofi said it would reserve first shipments of any COVID-19 vaccine for the United States.

The French multinational's chief executive Paul Hudson said the United States would get first dibs because its government was helping to fund the vaccine research.

His comments drew outrage Thursday from officials and health experts.

The letter ahead of the WHA said it was not the time to leave the task of resolving the pandemic to market forces or let the interests of wealthy companies and governments come before the need to save lives.

African Union Chairperson Ramaphosa said: "As the countries of Africa, we are resolute that the COVID-19 vaccine must be patent-free, rapidly made and distributed, and free for all.

"Nobody should be pushed to the back of the vaccine queue because of where they live or what they earn."

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The video has generated inquiries from across the world, with people asking how to establish similar classes in their own mosques

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Bradford mosque's men's pilates class goes viral over two million views on social media

Highlights

  • Video of men's pilates class at Bradford mosque receives nearly two million TikTok views and gains global attention.
  • Classes grown from seven to 25 participants, with mosque now limiting numbers due to space constraints.
  • Initiative aims to transform mosque into community hub beyond prayer, with women's sessions planned for future.

A men's pilates class at a Bradford mosque has attracted worldwide attention after a video of the sessions went viral on social media, receiving more than two million views.

Jamia Usmania Mosque on Heaton Road hosts the weekly Thursday classes aimed at men over 50, designed to improve health and wellbeing for older members of the community.

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