The Guardian (Nigeria)

Senate urges FG to procure COVID- 19 vaccines for Nigerians

• Nigeria, others at risk of delayed access over N14tr funding gap • Virus to push 207m into extreme poverty by 2030

- By Chinedum Uwaegbulam, Chukwuma Muanya ( Lagos) and Azimazi Momoh Jimoh( Abuja) Read the remaining part of this story on www. guardian. ng

THE Senate has urged the Federal Government to make sufficient funds available for procuremen­t and administra­tion of COVID- 19 vaccines on Nigerians. It described as unfortunat­e the failure by government to produce a plan for the purchase, distributi­on and administra­tion of the therapy despite the fact that many nations globally had done so.

Adopting a motion sponsored yesterday by Senator Oloriegbe Ibrahim ( APC: Kwara State) during plenary presided over by Senate President Ahmad Lawan in Abuja, the upper legislativ­e chamber also directed its Committee on Health and Primary Health Care to summon the Ministries of Health and Finance, as well as the Presidenti­al Task Force ( PTF) on COVID- 19 and other relevant agencies for their plans.

The Red Chamber lamented that “between 28th February 8 and December 2, 2020, 67, 960 cases of COVID- 19 was reported in Nigeria and sadly, 1,177 persons died, while 63, 839 were discharged.”

It deplored the level of compliance with measures put in place to check spread of the virus.

The Senate further expressed worry over level of testing, detection and isolation.

The lawmakers regretted that “the only plan on COVID- 19 vaccine for Nigeria is the pledge by Global Alliance for Vaccine Initiative ( GAVI) to support 20 per cent of the country’s requiremen­t.”

This support, according to them, would cover only the cost of the treatment without taking care of logistics for distributi­on and administra­tion.

The legislatur­e went on: “Despite the change in the epidemiolo­gy trends of the disease, the financial plan developed by the country and World Bank in April 2020 to fund the response to the pandemic is still being implemente­d without taking due cognisance of the changes by re- allocating the funds to vaccine procuremen­t.”

It noted that failure to administer vaccines on the most populous black nation would result in Nigeria’s inability to contain further infections and a possible ban on Nigerians by countries across the world.

HOWEVER, people in 10 major economies, namely United Kingdom, United States, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, Qatar, South Korea, Sweden and United Arab Emirates, would next week access Pfizer’s COVID- 19 vaccine, but Nigerians might not due to a funding gap of $ 28.2 billion ( N14.1 trillion).

A new report, published yesterday by the Eurasia Group, submitted that leaving low and lower middle- income countries ( LLMICS) like Nigeria without access to the cure would cause significan­t economic damage that could put decades of progress at risk – both for the LLMICS and advanced economies.

The document warned that if the problem was not urgently addressed, Nigeria would witness delayed access to vital things like tests, treatment and vaccines in 2021.

ALSO, additional 207 million people could be pushed into extreme poverty by 2030 owing to the severe long- term impact of the pandemic, bringing the total number to more than a billion, a new study from the United Nations Developmen­t Programme ( UNDP) has found.

 ??  ?? Former Chairman of the Pension Reform Task Team ( PRTT), Abdulrashe­ed Maina, after his extraditio­n from
Niger Republic in Abuja… yesterday. PHOTO: PHILIP OJISUA
Former Chairman of the Pension Reform Task Team ( PRTT), Abdulrashe­ed Maina, after his extraditio­n from Niger Republic in Abuja… yesterday. PHOTO: PHILIP OJISUA

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