Gould says COVAX clearly working, as vaccine-sharing program reaches 100 countries
OTTAWA — The international vaccine-sharing program known as COVAX says it has reached 100 countries with vaccines as of Thursday, though many of the world’s poorest nations have still not been able to receive a single dose.
Since Feb. 24, when the first COVAX doses landed in Ghana, the facility has delivered 38 million doses to 100 countries, including Canada.
“This is an important milestone because it’s proving that COVAX is working, that multilateralism is working, and that the world is responding to the COVID-19 pandemic in a co-operative and collaborative way,” International Development Minister Karina Gould said in an interview with The Canadian Press.
More than 60 of the first 100 recipients are low- and middle-income nations for whom COVAX is the main, if not only, supply of vaccines. The others are generally self-financing countries like Canada, who joined COVAX to get some doses and help fund doses in countries that can’t afford them on their own.


