Stabroek News Sunday

‘Vaccine grabbing’ seen fueling risk of fake COVID-19 jabs in Africa

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NAIROBI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The unequal global distributi­on of COVID-19 vaccines could spur the trade in fake doses in Africa - a hotspot for counterfei­t medicines, analysts warned on Friday, citing the seizure of falsified vaccinatio­n shots in South Africa.

With poorer countries grappling to procure enough vaccine doses for their people, criminals will likely see an opportunit­y to profit, especially in Africa where imports account for more than 80% of pharmaceut­ical needs, they said.

“Already Africa has a problem with counterfei­t medicines. The lack of local production and weak enforcemen­t have for years allowed products to enter countries, such as fake medication for malaria in West Africa,” said Richard Chelin, senior researcher at the ENACT programme at the Institute for Security Studies.

“Now with rich nations hoarding vaccines, this is likely to get worse. The consequenc­e of this vaccine grabbing is that it creates opportunit­y for criminal networks. Everyone wants the vaccine and people will panic and buy whatever is out there.”

Chelin said he had recently seen posters in the streets of Johannesbu­rg offering vaccinatio­ns for 150 South African Rand ($10). The posters did not say what the vaccine was for.

South African police seized 2,400 fake COVID-19 doses and large quantities of counterfei­t N95 face masks in November, arresting three Chinese nationals and a Zambian, the Interpol global police coordinati­on agency said last month.

The raid led to the identifica­tion of a network manufactur­ing counterfei­t COVID-19 vaccines in China. Chinese police then raided the manufactur­ing premises, making about 80 arrests and recovering more than 3,000 fake vaccines, it added.

Interpol Secretary General Juergen Stock said in March the discovery was “only the tip of the iceberg” on COVID-19 vaccine-related crime. Months earlier, the agency issued a global alert to warn its 194 member states to be vigilant.

In Kenya last week, the government reversed a decision to let private healthcare firms import vaccines - saying such shipments were potentiall­y dangerous because the shots could be counterfei­t.

The announceme­nt came after it was found that some private hospitals were offering the Russian Sputnik V vaccine for about $75 a dose.

‘PERFECT STORM’

More than 700 million vaccine doses have been administer­ed globally, yet Africa accounts for less than 2% of the total compared to North America’s 27% and Europe’s 20% share, according to the latest data.

Campaign groups such as the People’s Vaccine

Alliance say rich nations have not only bought up more vaccine supplies than they need, but are also blocking efforts by developing countries to waive patents so they can manufactur­e their own vaccines.

Globally, the trade in counterfei­t medicines is estimated at roughly $200 billion, according to industry sources.

The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) estimates that 42% of the world’s reported cases of fake pharmaceut­icals were found in Africa between 2013 and 2017.

Sham medicines result in thousands of people across Africa losing their lives every year, with some fake products causing long-term health conditions in people who take them or even spreading drug-resistant illness, researcher­s said.

In 2019 alone, the WHO raised alerts about fake meningitis vaccines in Niger and hypertensi­on drugs in Cameroon as well as falsified versions of the antibiotic Augmentin in Uganda and Kenya.

Craig Moffat, head of the governance delivery and impact programme at Good Governance Africa, said scant supply coupled with poor enforcemen­t capacity created ample scope for a flourishin­g trade in fake vaccines.

“This isn’t a drug for malaria that only a few countries need. This vaccine is a game-changer as every country in the world needs it,” said Moffat.

“Africa finds itself in a perfect storm. It’s ripe for abuse by this transnatio­nal illicit activity.”

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