The Standard (St. Catharines)

Iran receives 500,000 doses of Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TEHRAN, IRAN — Iran on Thursday received its first batch of foreign-made coronaviru­s vaccines as the country struggles to stem the worst outbreak of the pandemic in the Middle East.

The shipment consists of 500,000 doses of Russianmad­e Sputnik V vaccines which arrived at Tehran’s Imam Khomeieni Internatio­nal Airport from Moscow, the semi-official Fars news agency reported.

Also, Iranian state TV quoted Tehran’s ambassador to Russia, Kazem Jalali as saying Iran has ordered five million doses from Russia. The next batches are to arrive on Feb. 18 and Feb. 28, said Jalali.

However, a report on the semi-official ISNA news agency appeared to contradict Jalali’s statement and the Fars report. ISNA quoted Mohammadre­za Shanehsaz, head of Iran’s food and drug organizati­on, as saying Thursday’s shipment included only 10,000 doses of the Sputnik V vaccine.

The conflictin­g reports could not be immediatel­y reconciled. Shanehsaz also said that Iran had purchased two million dozes, not five million.

Last month, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei banned Iran from importing the American Pfizer-biontech and Britain’s Astrazenec­a vaccines, a reflection of mistrust toward the West.

The coronaviru­s has so far infected over 1.4 million people in Iran and killed more than 58,000.

In December, Iran began testing an Iranian-made vaccine in humans and said it expects to distribute it in spring, an extremely aggressive timeline. Before this year’s fast-tracked developmen­t of coronaviru­s vaccines, the usual methods of testing a vaccine for safety and efficacy with mass trials could take up to a decade.

The country has also began working on a joint vaccine with Cuba. It is also planning to import some 17 million doses of vaccine from COVAX and millions from other countries. But Iran is struggling to transfer some $220 million held in South Korean banks to pay for the COVID-19 vaccines through COVAX, an internatio­nal program designed to distribute coronaviru­s vaccines to participat­ing countries.

The government in Tehran has touted Iran’s domestic vaccine research, repeatedly alleging American sanctions undermine its efforts to purchase foreign-made vaccines and launch mass inoculatio­n campaigns. While sanctions do have specific carve-outs for medicine and humanitari­an aid to Iran, internatio­nal banks and financial institutio­ns hesitate in dealing with Iranian transactio­ns for fear of being fined or locked out of the American market.

 ?? SAEED KAARI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Russian-made coronaviru­s vaccines are unloaded in Tehran Thursday as Iran struggles to stem the worst outbreak of the pandemic in the Middle East.
SAEED KAARI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Russian-made coronaviru­s vaccines are unloaded in Tehran Thursday as Iran struggles to stem the worst outbreak of the pandemic in the Middle East.

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