Hard hats, AI and a fake pandemic: the group of former world leaders practising to save the world

In a boardroom just outside Nairobi, about a dozen individuals gathered at the World Health Organization’s (WHO) emergency hub last Thursday. Their attention was captured by an animated presentation displayed on a screen.

Health officials in eastern Chad have reported several fatalities among patients suffering from respiratory failure. Preliminary samples hint at a novel bird flu variant, yet confirmation necessitates sending these samples to an international laboratory. According to global health regulations, Chad is required to inform the WHO within 24 hours of assessment. However, the government hesitates, worried about the economic impact and potential stigma.

This scenario is a simulated pandemic outbreak, engaging some of Africa’s most esteemed figures. Present are members of the Elders, a collective of former presidents and global leaders, established by Nelson Mandela in 2007 to address worldwide challenges with their combined expertise.

The scenario poses a direct question: if you were Chad’s leader, how would you ensure the health minister adheres to international regulations to report the situation? What assurances would you seek from international partners to facilitate timely notification?

The group listens to a presentation about how the WHO supports African countries. Photograph: Legend shot it/The Elders Foundation

Ernesto Zedillo, former President of Mexico, is quick to respond. He emphasizes the need for incentives to encourage governments to comply. “How will the international community reassure governments that compliance is not just an obligation but will be met with acknowledgment?” he questions, referencing South Africa’s experience with punitive travel bans after identifying a new COVID-19 variant in 2021.

Ernesto Zedillo, a former president of Mexico. Photograph: Legend shot it/The Elders Foundation

Ernesto Zedillo, a former Mexican president, fires off the first response. He thinks incentives for governments “to do the right thing” are needed. “What will the international community do to reassure governments that this is not only their duty but that they will be acknowledged as being compliant?” he asks, citing South Africa’s feeling of being punished with travel bans and restrictions for detecting a new Covid-19 variant during the pandemic in 2021.

On the opposite side of the table, Zeid bin Ra’ad bin Zeid al-Hussein, a former UN high commissioner for human rights, says that health policymakers should model their response on what is working in other sectors. “What I think we need to do,” he says, “is look at the stronger systems that we have – where you have really strong verification – and say, ‘Why don’t we bring up the rest of these systems to meet them?’”

Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, a former Liberian president, says problems complying with international regulations on reporting pandemics often stem from weak healthcare systems. Photograph: Legend shot it/The Elders Foundation

The former Liberian president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf offers a different take, saying the problem is often caused by weak healthcare systems in the reporting countries that lack the capability to identify and report pandemics properly and are therefore unable to put pressure on governments to report their findings. “Most times, it is not a lack of political will as much as it is a failure of the systemic capability,” she says.

For about an hour, the Elders go through scenarios and exercises demonstrating real-time decision-making on how geopolitical, climate and conflict risks can worsen response to outbreaks. They draw on their collective experience and wisdom from past outbreaks during their times as leaders.

The session is preceded by a presentation from WHO personnel about how the organisation supports African countries in preparing, detecting and responding to health emergencies, and another about a new AI-enabled system to support decision-making on health threats.

The simulation happens amid the hantavirus outbreak and – coincidentally but as proof of the growing global threat of disease emergencies – just a day before health officials announce an Ebola outbreak in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo that has so far killed at least 139 people.

It is also on the minds of everyone in the room that negotiators missed this month’s deadline to finalise a global pandemic treaty announced during Covid in 2021. The agreement was supposed to lay out how nations should share information on pathogens that could cause pandemics and on the access they should be guaranteed in return in the form of vaccines, tests and treatments.

Dr Mohamed Janabi (left), the World Health Organization’s regional director for Africa, discusses the scenario with Tsakhia Elbegdorj, a former president of Mongolia. Photograph: Legend shot it/The Elders Foundation

The delay in agreeing such a treaty highlights the lack of trust between richer and poorer countries, especially in Africa, which experienced vaccine inequity and received few doses during the pandemic. Many believe the continent was in effect abandoned as wealthier countries stockpiled vaccines.

At the simulation, the Elders are presented with another scenario. Chad has finally notified WHO, but only after two weeks when the situation has deteriorated sharply, with cases starting to appear in northern Cameroon and severe flooding cutting off transport routes and causing further delays in sending pathogens to an international laboratory. How can WHO and its international partners better prepare for health and climate crises that will increasingly be hitting at the same time?

To get “a complete picture”, Hussein urges collaboration between science and climate experts to integrate and synthesise knowledge. “Many of us work both in the climate space and even climate science space,” he says. “And I don’t see too many health experts in that space, and I don’t see it vice versa either.”

Sirleaf agrees: “The international integrated system or integrated response is not there yet.”

Denis Mukwege said that the simulation stressed the importance of a multilateral approach when reacting to outbreaks. Photograph: Genna Print/WHO

Speaking afterwards, Denis Mukwege, a Congolese gynaecological surgeon and Nobel laureate, points to his country’s response to outbreaks of Ebola and mpox. He says the simulation stresses the importance of multilateralism, reacting quickly to outbreaks, and the political will for countries to collaborate.

“We need to work together because we never know where it will happen. And we need to get all the people to be ready when it happens,” he says. “We need really to understand that when we have the outbreak, it can go far and sometimes it can go beyond our borders.”

Dr Mohamed Janabi, WHO’s regional director for Africa, says the exercise has offered a window on the frontline reality in Africa, where the organisation recorded 146 emergency disease outbreaks last year. “You have seen what we face here,” he tells the Elders. “Outbreaks will continue; how we manage them, that’s the issue.”

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