GENEVA — World Health Organization member countries on Tuesday approved an agreement to better prevent, prepare for and respond to future pandemics in the wake of the devastation wrought by the coronavirus.
Sustained applause echoed in a Geneva hall hosting the WHO's annual assembly as the measure — debated and devised over three years — passed without opposition.
The U.S., traditionally the top donor to the U.N. health agency, was not part of the final stages of pandemic agreement process after the Trump administration announced a U.S. pullout from the WHO.
Many world leaders offered words of support for the U.N. health agency, and praised the show of multilateralism.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, speaking by video, congratulated WHO and the other member states, calling the accord "a shared commitment to fight future pandemics with greater cooperation while building a healthy planet.''
While many supporters praised the ''historic'' deal, U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. delivered a scathing critique of the U.N. health agency, saying the United States was working with unspecified ''like-minded'' countries to improve the global health system and called on health ministers in others to join.
''Like many legacy institutions, the WHO has become mired in bureaucratic bloat, entrenched paradigms, conflicts of interest and international power politics,'' Kennedy said in a video statement. ''We don't have to suffer the limits of a moribund WHO. Let's create new institutions or revisit existing institutions that are clean, efficient, transparent and accountable.''
The U.S. administration cited the WHO's ''mishandling of COVID-19'' and failure to enact needed reforms, and ''China's demonstrated political influence'' over science and policy at the agency, the State Department said in an email.