Chinese President Xi Jinping has offered to cooperate with India and other BRICS nations in the development of vaccines against the coronavirus. He also called for holding a symposium by the five-member bloc on traditional medicine to explore its role in the COVID-19 prevention and treatment.

“As we speak, the Chinese companies are working with their Russian and Brazilian partners on phase three clinical trials for vaccines. We are prepared to have cooperation with South Africa and India as well,” Xi said while addressing the 12th BRICS summit via video link.

The virtual summit, hosted by Russia President Vladimir Putin, was attended by all the member state heads.

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“China has joined the COVAX facility and will actively consider providing vaccines to BRICS countries where there is a need,” Xi said.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has said nine candidate vaccines, including two from China, are currently being evaluated for inclusion in the COVAX Facility. The COVAX is co-led by Gavi, an international vaccine alliance, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) and the (WHO). Its aim is to accelerate the development and manufacture of vaccines.

“To support the development of BRICS Vaccine R&D centre, China has designated its own national centre. I propose we convene a BRICS symposium on traditional medicine to explore its role in coronavirus prevention and treatment,” Xi said.

He also said that China will open the BRICS partnership on a new industrial revolution innovation centre in the Chinese city of Xiamen. “We welcome the active participation of fellow BRICS countries,” he said.

The Chinese President said the BRICS countries need to “overcome divisions with unity and pool the maximum global synergy to beat the virus.” In his speech, he focused on the need for the BRICS countries to support multilateralism, globalisation, which faced headwinds from growing nationalism in the US and other developed countries and advanced five proposals for the five-member bloc.

“History teaches us that multilateralism, equity and justice can keep war and conflict at bay. While unilateralism and power politics will inflate dispute and confrontation. We BRICS countries must hold high the banner of multilateralism. We must endeavour to safeguard the UN centred internationals system and international order underpinned by international law. The practice of using the pandemic to pursue de-globalisation will end up hurting one’s own interests,” he said.

So far, the coronavirus has infected more than 54 million people around the world and killed more than 1.3 million people even as governments implemented strict lockdowns and restrictions to slow the spread of the virus that originated in the Chinese city of Wuhan.