-
Venezuela's Maduro back in US court after stunning capture
-
French court orders ex-bishop to pay over 1970s child sex abuse
-
PSG Ligue 1 game postponed in between two legs of Liverpool Champions League tie
-
Iran may believe it has the upper hand as Trump seeks talks
-
EU urged to broadly restrict 'forever chemicals'
-
Italy seizes millions 'embezzled' from Ursula Andress
-
Trump says Iran 'better get serious' in Mideast war talks
-
Global trading system hit by 'worst disruptions in the past 80 years': WTO chief
-
EU accuses four porn platforms of letting children access adult content
-
Cathay Pacific raises fuel surcharge on all flights by 34%
-
EU probes Snapchat over suspected child protection failings
-
EU parliament backs Trump tariff deal -- with conditions
-
'Return hubs' for migrants clear EU parliament hurdle
-
Meta watchdog says grassroots fact checks risk harm to users
-
G7 meets in France to mend transatlantic rupture on Iran
-
ByteDance quietly rolls out SeeDance 2.0 globally
-
Israel strikes Iran as Tehran rejects US talks overture
-
Mercedes teen ace Antonelli wants more of the same after maiden win
-
Singer Rosalia quits Milan concert with food poisoning
-
Oil climbs and equities sink amid mixed messages on 'talks'
-
'Get out': Verstappen bans reporter from Japan press conference
-
Leaked Nepal report into deadly uprising calls for prosecuting ex-PM
-
Verstappen says last-minute F1 rule tweak will help only 'a tiny bit'
-
Oil rises and equities mixed amid mixed messages on 'talks'
-
EU to vote on Trump tariff deal -- but eyes rest of world
-
Somalia football slowly becomes a women's game
-
Venezuela oil reserves both entice and repel energy giants
-
Hamilton says more committed to F1 than ever at 41
-
China bans runner after mid-marathon splits goes viral
-
Myanmar's rebuild stutters year after deadly quake
-
Murray's 53 points propel Nuggets over Mavs
-
Israel strikes Iran as Trump says Tehran wants deal to end war
-
Wilkinson calls for England to find consistency before World Cup
-
Norris talks up McLaren chances after double China disaster
-
Teen sprint star Gout Gout 'ready to rock and roll' in Melbourne
-
Hezbollah rejects truce talks as Israel presses Lebanon strikes
-
Mideast war fuels disinformation about Taiwan's gas supply
-
Kohli, Suryavanshi to light up IPL as stampede dead remembered
-
Moon race: how China is challenging the US
-
Zimbabwe lithium export ban triggers crackdown, concerns
-
Embiid, George make triumphant NBA returns in Sixers win
-
North Korea's Kim 'warmly' welcomes Belarusian leader
-
Oil edges up and equities mixed amid mixed messages on 'talks'
-
Russian oil arrives as Philippines battles 'energy emergency'
-
G7 meets in France to narrow transatlantic Iran split
-
WTO mulls future of global trade under cloud of Mideast war
-
McKellar tells Waratahs to 'roll sleeves up' against rivals Brumbies
-
Iran says 'no negotiations' as US warns to accept 15-point deal
-
Postecoglou 'not done yet' as he watches Spurs and Forest battle relegation
-
US activists work to connect Iranians via Starlink
WHO emergency committee meets on monkeypox
A World Health Organization committee of experts will meet on Thursday to discuss the monkeypox outbreak for the first time and decide whether it constitutes a global health emergency.
The one-day meeting, being held in private, was due to start at 1000 GMT, with a statement on the outcome likely to be issued on Friday.
A surge of monkeypox cases has been detected since May outside of the West and Central African countries where the disease has long been endemic. Most of the new cases have been in Western Europe.
WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has convened an emergency committee to assess whether the outbreak constitutes a public health emergency of international concern.
A PHEIC is the highest alarm that the WHO can sound, under the International Health Regulations -- the legally-binding framework agreed by 196 countries on handling public health events that could cross borders.
Besides providing a PHEIC assessment, the committee members are set to give the WHO and its member states advice on how to better prevent the spread of the disease and manage their response.
"The emergency committee will provide a recommendation to the director-general based on scientific principles, and an assessment of the risk to human health, the risk of international spread and the risk of interference with international traffic," the WHO said.
Tedros then makes the final determination on whether a PHEIC should be declared, based on their advice.
There have been six PHEIC declarations since 2009, the last being for Covid-19 in 2020 -- though the sluggish global response to the alarm bell still rankles at the WHO's Geneva headquarters.
Emergency committee meetings on the new coronavirus outbreak were held on January 22 and 23, 2020 but the panel could not agree at that time that the PHEIC threshold had been reached.
A PHEIC was declared after a third meeting on January 30. But it was only after March 11, when Tedros described the rapidly-worsening situation as a pandemic, that many countries seemed to wake up to the danger.
- More than 2,000 cases -
This year, as of June 15, some 2,103 laboratory-confirmed cases and one probable case of monkeypox, including one death, have been reported to the WHO from 42 countries.
But the WHO's Europe office and the EU health agency ECDC said that 2,746 cases had been recorded in Europe alone as of Tuesday.
"The outbreak of monkeypox continues to primarily affect men who have sex with men who have reported recent sex with new or multiple partners," the WHO said.
Some 84 percent of the cases have been found in Europe, with the most cases being reported from Britain, Spain, Germany, Portugal, Canada and France.
The WHO says there may have been undetected transmission for some time before its unexpected appearance in multiple countries.
The UN health agency currently assesses the global risk level as moderate, considering the low mortality rate.
Tedros announced on June 14 that he would convene an emergency committee, describing the outbreak as "unusual and concerning".
X.Karnes--AMWN