New Delhi: Amid the Biden administration being blamed for not sending enough COVID-19 vaccines to India and causing a delay in sending more jabs, White House spokesperson Jen Psaki said the US is eager to continue assisting India. “There are legal/regulatory issues that need to be worked out country by country as we’re delivering vaccines. holdup not on this end but we’re eager to get vaccines and continue assistance to India,” she said.

When asked if a timeline regarding the delay in vaccine grant was discussed with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken during his India visit, Jen Psaki said: “I’d point you to GoI but we’re eager to continue to be partners to continue to provide assistance in form of vaccines.”

Earlier, a top Indian-American Congressman said the US has so far allocated only 7.5 million doses of COVID vaccines to India which is not enough and urged the Biden Administration to do more.

Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi said this after securing the support of 116 members of the Congress on his ongoing effort to expand US global vaccine aid programmes to India and other nations.

His statement has come on a day when the White House said it is eager to continue partnership with India in the fight against coronavirus and wants to provide assistance, including vaccines.

I’m once again urging President Biden and my colleagues in the Congress to come together and pass the NOVID Act into law to end this pandemic for good because, so long as outbreaks continue in any nation, the entire world faces the threat of new, vaccine-resistant variants, Krishnamoorthi said in a statement.

As we approach Indian Independence Day, we need to declare our independence from Covid by creating the global partnership necessary to produce and deliver the billions of vaccines necessary to truly bring this pandemic to an end, he said.

Meeting those goals will demand the continued cooperation of the world’s leading democracies and producers of these life-saving vaccines, including the United States and India, Krishnamoorthi added.

Under the NOVID Act, which Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi, Senators Jeff Merkley and Elizabeth Warren introduced with Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal, the US will establish the Pandemic Preparedness and Response Program (PanPReP) to oversee the global health response to the pandemic.

PanPReP will coordinate efforts between the Department of State, USAID, CDC, FDA, BARDA, Health Resources and Services Administration, DOD, the Peace Corps, and the Department of Labor.

The programme will also be responsible for coordinating the US Government response with international non-governmental organisations, development banks and civil society as well as foreign governments.

After the pandemic, the programme will shift to protect against future pandemics by coordinating a global disease surveillance network to identify and stop pandemic-potential pathogens before they spread uncontrollably.

The bill will authorise spending of USD 34 billion USD 25 billion to scale manufacturing capacity and produce 8 billion vaccine doses; USD8.5 billion to cover the cost of end-to-end delivery of enough vaccines to immunize 60 per cent of the populations in 92 COVAX countries; and USD 500 million to establish a global disease surveillance network to protect against future pandemics.

(With PTI inputs)