The Niagara Falls Review

O’Toole blasts PM over failed vaccine deal

Trudeau put all ‘eggs’ in one China basket, Conservati­ve leader says

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA — Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole accused the Liberal government Sunday of putting too much emphasis on partnering with a Chinese company for a COVID-19 vaccine in what turned out to be a failed deal.

O’Toole said the Trudeau government only turned its attention to preorderin­g tens of millions of vaccine doses from companies such as Pfizer and Moderna in August after 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 Center 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 a morning news conference. “If you look at the timeline, that’s when Canada started getting serious with Pfizer, Moderna, the other options,” he added.

“So that’s very concerning that in the midst of a pandemic, where we had already had early questions about the transparen­cy of China, that the Trudeau government was willing to almost double down on partnering with China.”

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.

In the face of mounting questions 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.

The chair of American vaccine maker Moderna told the CBC on Sunday that Canada is near the front of the line to receive 20 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine it preordered.

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