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The Right to Health is Essential for an Effective Pandemic Treaty

The Right to Health is Essential for an Effective Pandemic Treaty

GI-ESCR Participates in Dialogue with Geneva Permanent Missions   

On February 12, the Global Initiative for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (GI-ESCR) participated in an in-person dialogue with Geneva Permanent convened by the Geneva Global Health Hub (G2H2) and the Civil Society Alliance for Human Rights in the Pandemic Treaty. 

The meeting discussed why the right to health, enshrined in the World Health Constitution, must be the foundation of legal development in pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response. GI-ESCR and partners analysed the text of latest draft of the pandemic treaty and highlighted where the text lacks alignment with international human rights law.  

Rossella De Falco, Programme Officer on the Right to Health at the GI-ESCR, made an intervention detailing the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and human rights, drawing on the case studies of Kenya, Nigeria, and Italy 

Earlier this year, GI-ESCR and partners urged the WHO’s Intergovernmental Negotiating Body to open up the negotiating process to ensure effective and meaningful civil society participation, as well as to ground the text in international human rights law.  

This activity is part of GI-ESCR’s broader effort to mainstream human rights in global health governance and to advance progressive normative development, as in the case of the Principles and Guidelines on Human Rights & Public Health Emergencies.  

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