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Brazil airlifts emergency oxygen into pandemic-struck state, vaccine drive lags

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MANAUS/BRASILIA, (Reuters) - Brazil’s Air Force flew emergency oxygen supplies yesterday to the jungle state of Amazonas devastated by a resurgent pandemic and the government scrambled to organize nationwide vaccinatio­ns while President Jair Bolsonaro said he “should be at the beach.”

Doctors in Amazonas were using their own vehicles to transport patients, as locals sought to buy oxygen tanks on the black market, according to media reports. Desperate relatives, protesting outside hospitals in the state capital of Manaus, said patients had been taken off ventilator­s as oxygen ran out.

Health authoritie­s there said oxygen supplies had run out at some hospitals and intensive care wards were so full that scores of patients were being airlifted to other states. Doctors reported sharing oxygen between patients, alternatin­g every 10 minutes.

The Air Force flew cylinders with 9,300 kilograms of oxygen in from Sao Paulo state with another cargo expected on Friday. It said a flight carried nine patients from Manaus to Teresina in northeaste­rn Brazil, and evacuation­s will continue with two planes taking patients to six cities.

Officials had planned to airlift 61 premature babies in incubators out of Manaus, but the relocation ultimately was not needed because emergency oxygen supplies were procured. The World Health Organizati­on said ICU occupancy has been 100% full for two weeks in Manaus, causing shortages of oxygen and also of gloves and protective equipment for medical and laboratory staff, many of whom have been infected.

“This a situation where your whole system begins to implode,” Mike Ryan,

WHO’s top emergency expert, told a press conference in Geneva.

Brazilians protested against the right-wing president’s handling of the health crisis on Friday night. Residents of the country’s largest cities banged on pots and pans from their windows, many shouting “Out with Bolsonaro” and some crying “genocide.” The protest on social media was labeled #Brazilsuff­ocated. Potbanging protests were a hallmark of the early days of the pandemic by people critical of Bolsonaro’s tepid response. A government plan to start inoculatin­g Brazilians against COVID-19 early next week was in disarray. Bolsonaro said a plane standing by since Friday to pick up 2 million doses of an AstraZenec­a vaccine from India’s Serum Institute would now depart in “two or three days.”

Brazil’s Health Ministry requested immediate delivery of 6 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine developed by China’s Sinovac and imported by Sao Paulo state’s Butantan biomedical center, saying it needed them for its planned launch of immunizati­ons next week.

Health regulator Anvisa was set to decide on authorizin­g emergency use of Sinovac’s Coronavac as well as the AstraZenec­a vaccine on Sunday.

Bolsonaro, who has denied the gravity of COVID-19 and has stated he will not be vaccinated, said in a television interview there was little he could do about the pandemic as a second wave of the new coronaviru­s tore through the country.

“I should be at the beach right now,” he said on Band TV, adding that his health minister was doing an “exceptiona­l job.”

Critics of the president said the grim situation in

Manaus was just the latest example of his poor handling of the pandemic. Brazil has the world’s second highest COVID-19 death toll after the United States.

 ??  ?? A truck is loaded with oxygen to fill the local hospitals, after it arrived on a Brazilian Air Force airplane in Manaus airport, amid the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Brazil January 15, 2021. REUTERS/Bruno Kelly
A truck is loaded with oxygen to fill the local hospitals, after it arrived on a Brazilian Air Force airplane in Manaus airport, amid the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Brazil January 15, 2021. REUTERS/Bruno Kelly

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