The virtual summit was attended by US President Joe Biden, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga.
Tag: Quad summit
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Govt needs to get max advantage out of Quad grouping, share it with country: Congress
Congress spokesperson Pawan Khera said the Quad grouping should not become an agenda of one particular country being pushed.
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Quad to expand India’s manufacturing of Covid-19 vaccines, aims to create billion jabs by 2022
By ANI
WASHINGTON: The United States, along with other “like-minded” democracies, is set to announce a ‘historic agreement’ to expand COVID-19 vaccine production capacity, which will look at expanding the supply of coronavirus vaccines coming out of India, a senior administration official told reporters, just hours before the first of its kind the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) scheduled to take place on Friday.On Friday morning (local time) US President Joe Biden will virtually take part in a 90-minute long meeting of leaders of the “Indo-Pacific Quad” grouping – which includes the US, India, Japan and Australia.
“The focus of this deliverable is really expanding access to safe and effective vaccines by building the manufacturing capacity and focusing on companies in places like India that are already able to produce and export safe and effective vaccines,” the official asserted.
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“The United States is working closely with India and Japan and have put together complex financing vehicles that will allow for a very substantial frankly dramatic increase in the capacity to create vaccines, up to a billion by 2022,” the official further said.
Some of the additional vaccine capacity created in India would be used in vaccination efforts in Southeast Asian countries, the official told reporters.
ALSO READ | Keen to discuss COVID-19, challenges in Indo-Pacific at ‘historic’ Quad meeting: Australia PM
“We’re also going to establish tomorrow, a senior-level quad vaccine experts group and this is part of the building habits of cooperation that is one of the key focus of the Quad,” the senior administration official informed reporters.
The Quad leaders are also likely to announce financing agreements to boost India’s manufacturing of coronavirus vaccines, part of what some see as a Quad response to Beijing’s efforts to score diplomatic points by offering Made-in-China vaccines to the developing world.
Meanwhile, as a part of its vaccine diplomacy, New Delhi is providing Indian-made Covishield vaccines to other nations through the ‘Vaccine Maitri’ initiative.
India, a world pharmacy, is at the forefront of the fight against COVID-19. It has so far supplied 476.26 lakh doses of coronavirus vaccine globally.
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First Quad summit to focus on coronavirus vaccine supply in Indo-Pacific region
By PTI
NEW DELHI: In their first summit under the Quad framework on Friday, leaders of India, the US, Japan and Australia will deliberate on expanding cooperation in the Indo-Pacific region and focus on a coronavirus vaccine initiative to effectively deal with the pandemic, people familiar with the matter said.They said the virtual summit is expected to delve into pooling in individual strengths by the Quad countries to expedite global vaccine delivery and explore concrete collaboration in supplying safe and affordable vaccines in the Indo-Pacific region.
The people said the Quad vaccine initiative will project and reinforce India’s credentials as a reliable manufacturer and supplier of the vaccines, reaffirming the country’s stature as the “pharmacy of the world”.
The summit will be participated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, US President Joe Biden, Australian PM Scott Morrison and Japanese PM Yoshihide Suga.
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Biden is attending the summit less than two months after he took charge as US President.
It is learnt that a major deliverable at the summit will be the vaccine initiative under which vaccines against COVID-19 will be developed in the US, manufactured in India, financed by Japan and US, and supported by Australia.
The people cited above said the leaders will discuss regional and global issues of shared interest, and exchange views on practical areas of cooperation towards maintaining a free, open and inclusive Indo-Pacific region.
The summit is likely to exchange views on contemporary issues such as post-pandemic recovery, resilient supply chains, emerging and critical technologies, maritime security, and climate change.
The four Quad member countries have been resolving to uphold a rules-based international order in the Indo-Pacific amid growing Chinese assertiveness in the region.
The foreign ministers of the Quad countries held a virtual meeting on February 18 during which they vowed to uphold a rules-based international order underpinned by respect for territorial integrity and sovereignty, freedom of navigation and peaceful resolution of disputes.
India’s approach to the Indo-Pacific was enunciated by Modi in a speech at the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore in 2018.
Inclusiveness, openness and ASEAN centrality and unity lie at the heart of India’s Indo-Pacific vision.
The evolving situation in the Indo-Pacific region in the wake of China’s increasing military muscle-flexing has become a major talking point among leading global powers.
The US has been favouring making Quad a security architecture to check China’s growing assertiveness.
The foreign ministers of the Quad member nations met in Tokyo on October 6 and reaffirmed their collective vision for a free, open and inclusive Indo-Pacific.
The foreign minister of the four countries held their first meeting under the Quadrilateral or Quad framework in New York in September 2019.
In November 2017, India, Japan, the US and Australia gave shape to the long-pending proposal of setting up the Quad to develop a new strategy to keep the critical sea routes in the Indo-Pacific free of any influence.
Prime Minister Modi and his Japanese counterpart Suga, during a telephonic conversation on Tuesday, shared the view that cooperation towards realising a free and open Indo-Pacific is becoming increasingly important, the Japanese foreign ministry said.