The Borneo Post (Sabah)

S. Africa president blasts vaccine hoarding at Davos forum

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PRETORIA: South African President Cyril Ramaphosa on Tuesday lashed “vaccine nationalis­m,” accusing rich countries of bulk-buying coronaviru­s vaccines and hoarding them to the detriment of others.

Addressing the all-virtual 2021 World Economic Forum (WEF), Ramaphosa said low- and middleinco­me countries were being shouldered aside by wealthier nations able to acquire “up to four times what their population needs”.

“We are concerned about vaccine nationalis­m,” he warned.

“Rich countries in the world are holding on to these vaccines and we are saying: release the excess vaccines that you have ordered and hoarded.”

Ramaphosa’s comments coincides with growing concerns that bilateral deals between wealthier government­s and coronaviru­s vaccine manufactur­ers could hike prices and limit supply in some regions.

The World Health Organisati­on (WHO) had already warned against “vaccine nationalis­m” and “price gouging” last year, before a successful jab was found.

WHO head Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s this month told rich countries not to “cut the queue” and called on those which had ordered excess doses to hand them over to its Covax vaccinesha­ring facility.

South Africa, the continent’s worst-affected nation, is already paying two and a half times more for Oxford-AstraZenec­a’s Covid19 vaccine than European Union members, its health ministry said last week.

EU says it has invested heavily in the vaccine, taking the risk of funding its developmen­t and preproduct­ion at a time when there was no guarantee that it would be effective.

A first batch of at least 1.5 million doses ordered from the Serum Institute of India is expected to arrive in South Africa this month.

That eagerly-awaited shipment will mark the start of its inoculatio­n campaign, which aims to vaccinate two thirds of a 60 million-strong population by the end of 2021.

A total of 20 million doses have been ordered so far.

Covax is expected to provide shots for 10 percent of the population later this year, while other vaccines will be supplied via the African Union (AU) and bilateral contracts with manufactur­ers that have not yet been disclosed.

But Ramaphosa said pooling initiative­s such as the AU-led African Vaccine Acquisitio­n Task Team (AVATT) had only been “marginally successful”.

He urged vaccine hoarders to make excess doses directly available to their less wealthy counterpar­ts and back this with financial assistance.

“We want vaccines as quickly as other countries do,” Ramaphosa added.

“Coronaviru­s... affects all of us equally. Therefore our remedies, our actions to combat it must also be equal.”

While reported coronaviru­s cases have remained comparativ­ely low in Africa, many countries are battling with second infection waves often more viscous than their first.

More infectious virus variants, including one discovered in South Africa, have meanwhile accelerate­d the global vaccine scramble. AVATT, establishe­d by Ramaphosa himself as AU chair, has committed to buying a provisiona­l 270 million vaccine doses for African countries.

Covax is aiming to deliver 600 million shots to the continent.

It is estimated Africa will need 1.5 billion vaccine doses to immunise 60 per cent of its 1.3 billion inhabitant­s, costing between US$7 and US$10 billion.

We want vaccines as quickly as other countries do. Coronaviru­s... affects all of us equally. Therefore our remedies, our actions to combat it must also be equal. Cyril Ramaphosa

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