Regina Leader-Post

WAITING FOR CANADA'S SHOT

U.S. vaccine maker talks timing

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA • Canada is near the front of the line to receive 20 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine it pre-ordered from Moderna, the chairman of the U.S. company said Sunday, while Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’toole accused the Liberal government of putting too much emphasis on partnering with a Chinese vaccine maker in what turned out to be a failed deal.

“Canada is not at the back of the line,” Moderna co-founder and chairman Noubar Afeyan told CBC’S Rosemary Barton in an interview on Sunday.

Afeyan had been asked whether the fact that Canada committed to pre-purchase its doses before other jurisdicti­ons means it will get its supply first. He confirmed that was the case.

“The people who are willing to move early on with even less proof of the efficacy have assured the amount of supply they were willing to sign up to,” he said.

“Nothing that happened subsequent­ly can affect that.”

At a news conference on Sunday however, Conservati­ve Leader O’toole said the Trudeau government only turned its attention to pre-ordering tens of millions of vaccine doses from such companies as Moderna and Pfizer in August, when its collaborat­ion between the National Research Council and Chinese vaccine maker Cansino finally collapsed after months of delays.

The Council had issued Cansino a licence to use a Canadian biological product as part of a COVID-19 vaccine. Cansino was supposed to provide samples of the vaccine for clinical trials at the Canadian Centre for Vaccinolog­y at Dalhousie University, but the Chinese government blocked the shipments.

“I would not have put all our eggs in the basket of China,” O’toole said at the morning news conference.

“If you look at the timeline, that's when Canada started getting serious with Pfizer, Moderna, the other options,” he added, saying he was concerned that “the Trudeau government was willing to almost double down on partnering with China” earlier in the pandemic.

The government announced its major vaccine purchases in August after it confirmed the Cansino partnershi­p had fallen through. At the time, it said its decision had come after careful consultati­ons with its vaccine task force of health experts.

The Cansino partnershi­p with Dalhousie predated the deep freeze in Canada-china relations that occurred after the People's Republic imprisoned two Canadian men, Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, in apparent retaliatio­n for the RCMP'S arrest of Chinese high-tech executive Meng Wanzhou nearly two years ago on an American extraditio­n warrant.

This past week, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau created a firestorm when he said Canadians will have to wait a bit to get vaccinated for COVID-19 because the first doses off the production lines will be used in the countries where they are made.

As questions grew about the Cansino deal, Trudeau continued to defend his government's vaccine procuremen­t policy, which he says has secured multiple options for the country. Trudeau also appointed a Canadian Forces general to lead the logistics of an eventual vaccine rollout with the Public Health Agency of Canada.

O'toole said that with Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland poised to deliver the government's long-awaited fiscal update on Monday, the Liberals need to do two things to spur economic recovery: offer a better plan on how it will rollout vaccines for Canadians and step up the distributi­on of rapid tests.

“There can't be a full economy, a growing economy, people working, people being productive without the tools to keep that happening in a pandemic. Those two tools are rapid tests, and a vaccine.”

Freeland's fall economic statement is expected to give a full accounting of the government's record spending on programs to combat the pandemic. In July, the deficit was forecast to be at a record $343.2 billion but some estimates say it could easily top $400 billion.

The government could announce new spending such as taking steps toward a national childcare system, and relief for such battered industries as travel and restaurant­s that will face an uphill struggle to recover from the pandemic.

NDP finance critic Peter Julian sent Freeland a threepage letter urging her to take action on a variety of fronts to help struggling Canadian families during the pandemic.

They included taking concrete action on establishi­ng a national pharmacare plan to help Canadians pay for soaring prescripti­on drug costs, and establish a national daycare strategy to help women who have been disproport­ionately hindered by the pandemic. Julien also urged Freeland to help Indigenous communitie­s and abandon the government's plans to pay for the Trans- Mountain Pipeline and ramp up its fight against climate change.

Green party Leader Annamie Paul called on Freeland to deliver “a positive vision for a green recovery” to accelerate Canada's transition to a carbon-neutral economy.

“We are optimistic that a vaccine for COVID-19 will be widely available next year and so we must be prepared for what comes next,” Paul said in a statement.

 ??  ??
 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Paramedics transfer a person from Maimonides Geriatric Centre in Montreal on Sunday as COVID-19 cases continue to rise in Canada and around
the world. Vaccine maker Moderna says Canada is near the front of the line to receive 20 million doses of its vaccine.
GRAHAM HUGHES / THE CANADIAN PRESS Paramedics transfer a person from Maimonides Geriatric Centre in Montreal on Sunday as COVID-19 cases continue to rise in Canada and around the world. Vaccine maker Moderna says Canada is near the front of the line to receive 20 million doses of its vaccine.
 ?? JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? According to Conservati­ve Leader Erin O'toole, Canada only started getting serious with Pfizer, Moderna and other
options for a COVID-19 vaccine after dealings on a vaccine with China fell through.
JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS According to Conservati­ve Leader Erin O'toole, Canada only started getting serious with Pfizer, Moderna and other options for a COVID-19 vaccine after dealings on a vaccine with China fell through.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada