Health and Lifestyle
Global Health or Global Control? The Explosive Battle Over WHO’s IHR Reforms -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka
If honesty brings isolation as governments are likely to predict and want to avoid then they will not report danger, but rather secrecy that can buy time. No country will accept a “shared” health security architecture based on privatized gains and socialised losses. And no serious reform can ever be a success if great powers continue preaching the virtues of a rules-based order abroad while practicing selective self-interest at home.
The struggle is framed as a technical legal revision of the International Health Regulations (IHR) which regulate, at least in principle, how nation-states respond to contagious disease threats. It is nothing of the sort. It is a geopolitical battle for power, sovereignty, trust and the right to determine who receives protection first when the next pandemic arises. But lurking behind that diplomatic facade of cooperation and preparedness lies a much harsher truth: the world is not so great at simply rewriting health rules. It is battling for whom the global emergency playbook will serve.
That fight is so charged because the memory of Covid-19 still stings. The pandemic revealed a cold reality many governments wish it would sanitize: when crisis struck, solidarity shattered. Borders closed, vaccine nationalism percolated through the rich world stockpiling supplies as corporations outsourced production to poorer countries waiting in line while calls for global justice were hollow. In that context, the demand to tighten up International Health Regulations does not sound unreasonable until you ask the inconvenient question: stronger for whom and under whose conditions?
This update has been demanded, specifically by supporters of reform in the IHR to have exigent reporting, improved surveillance capabilities and more transparent information sharing internationally as well. In principle, this sounds not only logical but time-sensitive. A new age of transnational health threat must not find the world once again response fragmented. Without political integrity, however, legal reform is likely to be reduced in an instrument of unequal domination with a shiny glint.
Low- and middle-income countries have more than enough reason to doubt. They recall being pressured to release their unique samples and outbreak data rapidly, only for a broad range of profits and life saving technologies from the use emerging elsewhere. Transparency, they recall, was often more helpful to the powerful than it ever was for vulnerable people. Data flowed upward. Vaccines did not. Warnings were globalized. Equity was not.
This is why this debate isn’t just about public health. Whether international law will rectify this pandemic injustice or perpetuate it in the guise of efficiency.
The fear of “global control” are often poetry as paranoia, but such suspicions should not be so easily caricatured. Domestic choices are constrained by international rules. They impose obligations, expectations pressures and reputational risks. In this sort of world, calls for operational compliance in some states feel less like cooperation and more like supervision masquerading as solidarity to those with fragile systems or painful colonial histories. If reforms increase surveillance responsibilities, reporting requirements or external scrutiny without ensuring equitable access to medicines, diagnostics and financing / technology transfer; the system will be that which many critics suspect: more disciplined transparency for the weak strategic flexibility for the powerful.
That double standard is the actual scandal.
The WHO is facing a deep credibility test. It cannot act as if legal compliance on its own will heal the profound divisions that Covid-19 laid bare, and it clearly needs governments to agree tougher rules for future emergencies. Trust is not built on statements. It grows from fairness. And part of being fair means not claiming that states canbe expected to give an early warning system when they face potential economic sanctions, political stigma and almost certain neglect in any material aid as soon asthey have sounded the alarm.
If honesty brings isolation as governments are likely to predict and want to avoid then they will not report danger, but rather secrecy that can buy time. No country will accept a “shared” health security architecture based on privatized gains and socialised losses. And no serious reform can ever be a success if great powers continue preaching the virtues of a rules-based order abroad while practicing selective self-interest at home.
The simplest and most brutal truth behind this whole dispute is that the world collectively wants global health security without any national political accountability attachments. Its disclosure fast without unconditional equity. The EU wants binding obligations on the weaker states along with wiggle-room for stronger ones. This is not global health governance. That is managed hypocrisy.
IHR reforms will matter, but not because the mere existence of legal text can save the world. They will matter because they would show what the international system has learned if anything from its worst public health failure in a hundred years. A new set of rules that creates a truly faster, fairer and reciprocal framework could prove to be a turning point. If not, they will be another pillar in the temple of diplomatic theater: majestic on paper and empty as a vessel for justice, unstable when time comes to face what happens next.
The world longs for better rules to govern pandemic disasters. It does.
The real question? Will those rules be there to save humanity or will they just help rearrange the deck chairs on inequality, with fancier clips of how it’s all working out.
Fransiscus Nanga Roka
Faculty of Law University 17 August 1945 Surabaya Indonesia