Prince Harry makes Covid vaccine plea at GQ Awards
The Duke of Sussex made a virtual appearance at the awards to present a prize to Professor Dame Sarah Gilbert, Professor Catherine Green and the team behind the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine.
In his speech he urged Boris Johnsonâs government and other governments around the world to do all they can to vaccinate poorer countries.
He warned: âUntil every community can access the vaccine and until every community is connected to trustworthy information about the vaccine, then we are all at riskâ.
The duke said people were being âoverwhelmed by mass-scale misinformation,â leading to hesitancy over the jab.
âAs people sit in the room with you tonight, more than a third of the global population has received at least one dose of the vaccine. Thatâs more than five billion shots given around the world so far,â he said.
âIt sounds like a major accomplishment and in many ways it is, but there is a huge disparity between who can and cannot access the vaccine.
âLess than 2% of people in the developing world have received a single dose at this point. And many of the healthcare workers are still not vaccinated.
âWe cannot move forward together unless we address this imbalance as one. At the same time, families around the world are being overwhelmed by mass-scale misinformation across news media and social media, where those who peddle in lies and fear are creating vaccine hesitancy, which in turn leads to divided communities and eroding trust.
âThis is a system we need to break if we are to overcome Covid-19 and the risk of new variants.â
Oxford/AstraZeneca team âour nationâs prideâThe team of scientist behind the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine were described as âheroes of the highest orderâ by Prince Harry.
âThey are our nationâs pride and we are deeply indebted to their service. For the rest of us, including global governments, pharmaceutical leaders and heads of business, we have to keep doing our part,â he said.
âThat must include sharing vaccine science and supporting and empowering developing countries with more flexibility. Where you are born should not affect your ability to survive when the drugs and know-how exist to keep you alive and well.â
The award ceremony was attended by some of the UKâs biggest stars with singer Ed Sheeran, actor Rege-Jean Page and England manager Gareth Southgate all being honoured.
Line of Duty star Adrian Dunbar, Dame Vivienne Westwood and Hollywood filmmaker Quentin Tarantino were also awarded.
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