Wed, 27 May 2026 · LIVE
Updated May 27, 2026 · 12:26
World News Updated May 27, 2026

Health of Nations Key to Global Security at Moscow Forum

The International Security Forum in Moscow brings together over 120 countries to discuss global security challenges. Russian Health Minister Mikhail Murashko emphasizes healthcare as a national security priority, including vaccine development. BRICS coordination on information security and cyber threats is highlighted by Maria Zakharova. South Africa's Khumbudzo Ntshavheni shares post-pandemic epidemic response and vaccine production plans.

International Security Forum highlights health of nations as key to global stability

Moscow, May 27

The International Security Forum, held under the auspices of the Security Council of Russia, commenced in the Moscow Region on Tuesday, bringing together senior officials, security experts, and representatives from across the world to deliberate on key global security challenges. International media network TV BRICS is serving as the official international media partner of the event.

According to TV BRICS, the forum has drawn participation from more than 140 foreign delegations representing over 120 countries, including nations from Africa, all member states of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, BRICS, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, as well as several countries from the Middle East and Latin America. The participants include secretaries of security councils, intelligence chiefs, representatives of international organisations, diplomats, and policy experts.

On the opening day of the forum, the Russian Ministry of Health organised a round table discussion titled "The Power of Cooperation for the Health of Nations," focusing on the growing intersection between healthcare and national security.

Addressing the gathering, Mikhail Murashko outlined Russia's healthcare priorities through 2030, emphasising the strengthening of primary healthcare systems, prevention of non-communicable diseases, digital transformation of medical services, and expansion of healthcare personnel policies aimed at increasing the number of medical professionals.

Murashko also highlighted Russia's capability to independently develop vaccine technologies and produce vaccines against emerging threats, including multiple strains of Ebola. He stressed that epidemics, biological threats, workforce shortages, cyberattacks, and non-communicable diseases are directly linked to national security concerns and require coordinated responses at both domestic and international levels.

Speaking to TV BRICS, Maria Zakharova underscored the importance of international coordination on information security within the BRICS framework amid rapid global digitalisation.

Zakharova stated that cooperation on international information security has remained a central issue on the BRICS agenda since 2013, when a dedicated working group was established. She noted that member nations have since developed common approaches aimed at building a universal system of international information security based on the principles of sovereign equality, non-interference in internal affairs, and the central role of the United Nations.

She further said that the BRICS register of points of contact, launched in 2024, enables rapid communication among computer incident response teams to identify sources and circumstances of malicious cyber activity. According to Zakharova, efforts are also under way to coordinate responses to cyber incidents, combat cybercrime, and deepen collaboration among experts and academic institutions.

Meanwhile, Khumbudzo Phophi Silence Ntshavheni highlighted South Africa's experience in coordinating epidemic responses during the post-pandemic era. She said the COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated how international cooperation could accelerate vaccine development and strengthen preparedness against global health emergencies.

Ntshavheni noted that South Africa is leading initiatives to establish Africa's first end-to-end multi vaccine production facility, which will initially manufacture oral cholera vaccines before expanding production to vaccines for polio, pneumonia, and meningitis. Once fully operational, the facility is expected to produce up to 40 million doses annually.

The significance of multilateral cooperation was also highlighted by the World Health Organization Representative in Russia, Batyr Berdyklychev, who stated that while WHO does not possess supranational authority, it plays a critical role in coordinating information exchange, facilitating cooperation, and developing international healthcare standards and recommendations.

The International Security Forum will continue until May 29.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Aman W

Interesting that Russia is talking about healthcare priorities till 2030 while dealing with sanctions. But honestly, India has been doing similar things in Ayushman Bharat and digital health. Maybe we can learn from their vaccine tech, but I wish India hosted more such global health security dialogues too. We have the PM-JAY experience to share.

David E

It's surprising that India isn't directly represented in the highlights, given our role in global health through WHO, GAVI, and our massive generic pharma industry. But the South Africa vaccine facility story is promising. India could partner with Africa on vaccine production as we already do with drug supplies. Less talk, more action needed.

Rohan X

Cyber security and health security - finally someone connecting the dots! With so many hospital ransomware attacks in India (like AIIMS last year), we need BRICS collaboration. Zakharova's point about points of contact for cyber incidents is practical. But let's be honest - Russia's own cyber track record isn't spotless. Still, the forum sounds productive. 🤔

Michael C

As someone from the West, I find the BRICS approach refreshing. WHO's role is helpful but limited due to funding politics. Russia and South Africa stepping up for Africa's vaccine production is exactly what global health equity needs. Meanwhile, India's Serum Institute already manufactures 60% of world vaccines. Together, BRICS can truly reshape health security without past colonial baggage. 👍

Nisha Z

I appreciate the focus on primary healthcare and digital transformation. In rural India, our primary health centres still lack basic digital infrastructure. Hope such global discussions translate to real tech transfer to

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked