China Daily

Colombia, Mexico get more shots

Shipments of Chinese vaccine bolster fight against pandemic in Latin America

- By CHINA DAILY Xinhua and Sergio Held in Cajica, Colombia, contribute­d to this story.

Colombia and Mexico welcomed the arrival of their first batches of a Chinese-developed vaccine against COVID-19 over the weekend.

Both Latin American nations received CoronaVac, a vaccine from the Chinese pharmaceut­ical company Sinovac Biotech.

In Colombia, the arrival of 192,000 doses was greeted with the highest-grade reception at Bogota airport on Saturday, with Colombian President Ivan Duque and Vice-President Marta-Lucia Ramirez among the officials present.

Duque expressed his delight that more vaccines had arrived and voiced his appreciati­on for China’s support to Colombia in fighting the coronaviru­s.

He said the vaccines will be “deployed throughout the national territory” including remote regions such as the Amazon.

China’s Ambassador to Colombia, Lan Hu, also on hand for the arrival of the Sinovac shipment, welcome its arrival.

Lan said the fight against the pandemic “has been the priority” of bilateral relations since last year and that the arrival of the vaccine represents an opportunit­y to help the country return to normality.

“We hope that this vaccine, as a global public good, can play a more positive role in this battle, in this fight, in this national vaccinatio­n plan to save more lives and to restore normality to our socioecono­mic life as soon as possible.”

Duque said the cooperatio­n between the two countries is yielding more and more fruit as well as greater mutual trust.

Colombia’s National Food and Drug Surveillan­ce Institute approved the emergency use of CoronaVac in early February.

Part of the batch that arrived on Saturday will be sent to the 48,000 inhabitant­s of Leticia, the capital of Colombia’s administra­tive department of the Amazon. The area has been hit hard by a strain of SARSCoV-2 — the virus that causes COVID-19 — first found in South America. The strain, known as P.1, caused large outbreaks of infections in cities such as Manaus, on the Brazilian side of the Amazon jungle.

Mass inoculatio­ns

Mass vaccinatio­n against COVID-19 began on Thursday in major hospitals in Bogota and other cities. Under Colombia’s national vaccinatio­n plan, healthcare workers and older people are among the first groups being immunized. Leticia skips the national queue in an effort to cut the spread of the P.1 strain of the virus in that area.

By Sunday, Colombia had over 2.21 million cases while Mexico had over 2.03 million cases, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

On Saturday, Mexico received its first shipment of 200,000 doses of CoronaVac. A batch of Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine is expected by Monday.

Health officials earlier said the first shipments of the Chinese and Russian vaccines would be used in low-income neighborho­ods of Mexico City and its suburbs.

Mexico is currently using vaccines from Pfizer and AstraZenec­a and has administer­ed almost 1.6 million doses of those.

The country will now be faced with the logistical challenge of handling four vaccines, all of which require two doses.

On Saturday, Mexican Assistant Health Secretary Hugo Lopez-Gatell tweeted that he had light COVID-19 symptoms on Friday night. He was awaiting the results of a PCR test.

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