The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Philippine­s begins Covid-19 vaccinatio­n rollout

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MANILA: The Philippine­s launched its Covid-19 vaccinatio­n drive yesterday, with health workers, soldiers, police and government officials first in line to get donated Chinese jabs despite concerns over their effectiven­ess.

Key aides of President Rodrigo Duterte, who were among hundreds to get jabs, described getting inoculated as a moral duty.

The rollout started at six Manila hospitals a day after the government, under fire over delays in vaccine procuremen­t, received 600,000 donated doses from Beijing.

“It kindles hope that, after nearly a year in darkness, the light is back on,” said presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque.

The Philippine­s has recorded more than 576,000 virus cases and 12,000 deaths, with infections at a four-month high as the vaccine rollout began.

The donated doses represent a fraction of the shots Manila has been negotiatin­g with seven manufactur­ers to secure.

The bulk of the supply is not expected until later this year.

But the challenge is not limited to stock.

Low public confidence in vaccines remains after the country became the first to deploy the dengue vaccine Dengvaxia in 2016.

A botched rollout led to unfounded claims that several dozen children had died from the jab, and recent surveys showed

It kindles hope that, after nearly a year in darkness, the light is back on.

Harry Roque

almost half of the population were unwilling to be inoculated against coronaviru­s.

Duterte’s chief vaccine negotiator Carlito Galvez lashed out at critics who he said were spreading “fake news” that the Sinovac jab, called CoronaVac, is no good.

“Getting a jab is a moral obligation for everyone. We must not wait for the so-called best vaccine because there is no such thing,” he said.

CoronaVac only obtained regulatory approval for emergency use days before the doses arrived, and the regulator initially did not recommend it for healthcare workers due to its comparativ­ely low efficacy.

The government later allowed it to be offered to those willing to take it, but many nurses and doctors have opted to wait for other vaccines.

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? Health Secretary Francisco Duque III (right) administer­s the Sinovac vaccine on Eileen Aniceto, medical doctor of the Lung Center of the Philippine­s, in Quezon City.
— AFP photo Health Secretary Francisco Duque III (right) administer­s the Sinovac vaccine on Eileen Aniceto, medical doctor of the Lung Center of the Philippine­s, in Quezon City.

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