Published: 11:13, July 17, 2020 | Updated: 22:13, June 5, 2023
UN aid chief to G20 on virus: 'Step up now or pay price later'
By Reuters

Mark Lowcock, UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, attends a meeting about the situation in Venezuela at the United Nations in New York on April 10, 2019 in New York City. (PHOTO / AFP)

NEW YORK - Coronavirus support to poor countries has been so far “grossly inadequate and that’s dangerously shortsighted,” UN aid chief Mark Lowcock said on Thursday as he asked wealthy countries for billions more dollars in assistance.

The United Nations increased its humanitarian appeal by more than a third to US$10.3 billion to help 63 states, mainly in Africa and Latin America, tackle the spread and destabilizing effects of the coronavirus

The United Nations increased its humanitarian appeal by more than a third to US$10.3 billion to help 63 states, mainly in Africa and Latin America, tackle the spread and destabilizing effects of the coronavirus. This is up from the world body’s initial US$2 billion request in March, then US$6.7 billion in May.

ALSO READ: IMF chief warns global economy 'not out of the woods'

So far, Lowcock said, the United Nations has only received US$1.7 billion.

As finance ministers from the Group of 20 major economies prepare to meet virtually on Saturday, Lowcock told reporters: “The message to the G20 is step up now or pay the price later.”

The coronavirus has infected at least 13.6 million people and there have been more than 584,000 known deaths worldwide, according to a Reuters tally.

The United Nations has warned that if action is not taken, the pandemic and associated global recession will trigger an increase in global poverty for the first time since 1990 and push 265 million people to the brink of starvation.

ALSO READ: Specter of famine to haunt millions of people

“The response so far of wealthy nations, who’ve rightly thrown out the fiscal and monetary rule books to protect their own people and economies, the response that they’ve made to the situations in other countries has been grossly inadequate and that’s dangerously shortsighted,” Lowcock said.

Lowcock added he had lobbied US lawmakers for funding earlier this week. A House of Representatives committee has proposed US$10 billion in international aid. So far, Congress has provided US$2.4 billion in emergency foreign aid.

In May, China’s President Xi Jinping pledged US$2 billion to help deal with the coronavirus and economic and social development in affected countries, especially developing states.

READ MORE: Worst drought in a century hits EU region already reeling from virus

Lowcock said he would “very much welcome it if some significant proportion of those resources could be used directly to support the global humanitarian response plan.”