BusinessMirror

BRAZIL’S BOLSONARO REJECTS COVID VACCINE FROM CHINA

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SÃO PAULO— Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro on Wednesday rejected the announced purchase of 46 million doses of a potential vaccine against the coronaviru­s being developed by a Chinese company and tested in a state governed by a political rival, prompting some to question if he was allowing politics to steer public health decisions.

“The Brazilian people will not be anyone’s guinea pig,” Bolsonaro said on his social media channels, adding that the vaccine has not yet completed testing, which is the case with all potential vaccines for the virus. “My decision is to not purchase such a vaccine.”

Health Minister Eduardo Pazuello had announced the purchase on Tuesday in a meeting with São Paulo Gov. João Doria, a foe of Bolsonaro’s whose state is participat­ing in the vaccine’s developmen­t through its Butantan Institute. The cost of the acquisitio­n was estimated at 2 billion reais ($ 360 million).

“Butantan’s vaccine will be Brazil’s vaccine,” Pazuello said.

A Brazilian Health Ministry document issued Monday and shared by São Paulo’s government Wednesday confirmed that the ministry had put in writing its intention to buy the doses of the “Butantan Vaccine- Sinovac/ Covid- 19” for an estimated price of $ 10.30 each.

The document made explicit the purchase was contingent upon the health regulator’s approval. Bolsonaro told journalist­s that protocol will be canceled.

Claudio Couto, a political science professor at Getulio Vargas Foundation, a university, felt the president’s move had little to do with the virus and was more a way to hurt Doria, who is widely cited as a likely challenger to Bolsonaro’s 2022 reelection bid.

“His concern is to be a strong candidate for reelection, and that often means giving trouble to his adversarie­s,” Couto said.

Bolsonaro and Doria have had an adversaria­l relationsh­ip since the start of the pandemic, with each taking opposite stances regarding stay- athome recommenda­tions and restrictio­ns on activity. The governor, whose state is Brazil’s most populous, heeded the counsel of public health experts and adopted such measures, which the president blasted, arguing the economic fallout could kill more than the disease.

Brazil has confirmed more than 153,000 deaths from Covid- 19, the second most in the world, behind only the US. The South American nation has also reported 5.2 million confirmed cases of coronaviru­s infections, the world’s third highest tally.

“It isn’t ideology, it isn’t politics, and it isn’t the electoral process that saves. It is the vaccine,” Doria told reporters in the national capital, Brasilia.

During a brief news conference in the São Paulo countrysid­e, Bolsonaro shot back at Doria, accusing the governor of playing politics by hurrying out a vaccine in an effort to buoy his popularity. The president also accused his adversarie­s, including Doria, of “promoting a narrative of terrorism since the start of the pandemic.”

Brazil has a long tradition of immunizati­on programs. The South American country has a struggling, but universal public health care system that has been key to stopping outbreaks of measles, yellow fever and other diseases.

Bolsonaro has said no one will be forced to get a coronaviru­s vaccine. But his comments Wednesday reflected particular skepticism of the vaccine being developed by Chinese pharmaceut­ical company Sinovac.

He has often expressed mistrust of the Asian power, which is Brazil’s biggest trading partner, particular­ly on the campaign trail in 2018. He called China “heartless” and said that under his watch it wouldn’t be allowed to buy up Brazil.

“THE CHINE SE VACCINE OF JOÃO DORIA,” Bolsonaro wrote on social media Wednesday. “For my government, any vaccine, before it is made available to the population, must be PR OVEN SCIEN TIFICALLY.”

Despite that nod to scientific rigor, Bolsonaro for months touted the healing powers of hydroxychl­oroquine even as studies indicated the anti- malarial drug was ineffectiv­e against the coronaviru­s and caused harmful side effects.

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