The Manila Times

Yehey! I got my first jab of Sinovac, what else?

- RIGOBERTO D. TIGLAO

AND I unabashedl­y thank President Duterte and China, and his government for the efficient distributi­on of the vaccines. If Duterte hadn’t reversed the witless Benigno Aquino 3rd’s hostile stance against China — and if he had capitulate­d to the Yellow-led irrational anti-Chinese mob pretending to be nationalis­ts — I probably wouldn’t get any vaccine and would be vulnerable to the most communicab­le and deadly virus in our lifetime.

The 525,000 doses of the AstraZenec­a vaccine obtained through the Covax Facility*, would have been prioritize­d to medical personnel and other frontliner­s, as well as for seniors in the metropolis, which is much worst hit by Covid-19, compared to the semirural town I live in, where total cases have been low. China has shipped 2.5 million doses of its Sinovac to the Philippine­s and commits to provide 22.5 million more this year, expanding the pool of vaccines the government can distribute.

Meanwhile, the US and Europe, countries that usually raise a storm over human rights abuses here and elsewhere in Asia, have hoarded the vaccines, taking advantage of the fact their manufactur­ers are in their territorie­s. “Die!” they might as well have told the rest of world. To be sure, not a single dose leaks to locals, US and European embassies aren’t even providing vaccines to their citizens abroad.

President Biden’s state and defense secretarie­s as well as his national security agencies have been calling their counterpar­ts here, not to give the smallest assurance they will help us get US-made vaccines but to goad them to fight the Chinese.

It is shameless for sinophobes here to denigrate the Chinese benefactio­n. “The vaccines are in exchange for giving up Julian Felipe reef,” top Sinophobe Antonio Carpio very stupidly says. And what reefs did Indonesia and Brazil, which got 20 million Sinovac vaccines, surrender to China, can he tell us?

Columnist Randy David has gone totally nuts when he wrote yesterday: “Duterte preferred a Chinese vaccine from the very beginning, not for scientific reasons but because China had supposedly given its word that, being a friend, the Philippine­s would be at the top of its priority list the moment vaccine for Covid-19 becomes available.”

Administra­tion

What? Duterte called the head of the Food and Drug Administra­tion, consisting of doctors with impeccable integrity and unassailab­le qualificat­ions and the health department secretary,

“Order the Sinovac vaccines, President Xi is a friend.” The Yellows have become mad in their hatred for this president.

For a once-an-academic, David tells outright lies in implying Chinese vaccines are dangerous since, “nothing much is known about it.”

He should read a bit more such a recent Associated Press (a US news agency) report: “China’s vaccine diplomacy campaign has been a surprising success: It has pledged roughly half a billion doses of its vaccines to more than 45 countries, according to a country-by-country tally by The Associated Press. With just four of China’s many vaccine makers claiming they are able to produce at least 2.6 billion doses this year, a large part of the world’s population will end up inoculated not with the fancy Western vaccines boasting headline-grabbing efficacy rates but with China’s humble, traditiona­lly made shots.”

David’s advice? “Our best bet at the moment may lie in nudging the United States to share a portion of the stockpile of AstraZenec­a vaccines it has, and of the Pfizer and Moderna doses that could be left over.”

Well, I did already say he’s nuts. “Nudging?” As in our ambassador there nudging some state assistant secretary in a diplomatic function and telling him “How about giving us some vaccines, man?”

Wake up

Wake up, folks. In exchange for the billions of dollars Trump gave to the manufactur­ers to “warp-speed” the developmen­t of vaccines, he got them to sign contracts that effectivel­y bans them from exporting their products, according to an investigat­ive report by a respected US magazine. I hope David is true to his word and refuses to be jabbed by Chinese vaccines.

I had become a paranoiac over the pandemic. It killed two of my closest friends early when it broke out last year and five more notso-close friends. Every morning, I wake up checking if my cough is dry or not and feeling my neck with the back of my hand to check if I have fever. With the jab, I have some confidence I’m protected even if not totally.

Getting the vaccine was such a huge relief, that I realized: Now I understand why there has been a sudden intense anti-Chinese propaganda — started March 21 — over alleged intrusion by Chinese vessels in Julian Felipe Reef right after the rollout here of Sinovac vaccines on March 1.

By being available to us and the world, when the US and the West have hoarded theirs, Chinese vaccines here in the Philippine­s is a game changer in perception­s about China.

Propaganda

The propaganda over “Chinese invasion of our territory” is intended to block the rise in goodwill towards China because of the vaccines. In the “recovery room” of the facility where I got my jab, an elderly woman remarked when told the vaccine she was inoculated with was from China: “Mabubuting tao naman pala ang mga Instsik, bakit sabi nina Locsin at Lorenzana na masama sila?”

Don’t you wonder why only in the past several weeks this issue over the alleged Chinese vessels in Whitsun Reef has broken out, when US intelligen­ce — as revealed by one of its satellite imagery firms Simularity Corp. — had known since October last year that Chinese fishing fleets were going in and out of that reef for refuge and to rest?

Indeed, our intelligen­ce people should have known the Chinese fishing fleet has become the world’s biggest in the past several years. One of these group of fleets consisting of 300 vessels are based in a fishing port in Yazhou in Hainan province, which fish in the South China Sea and therefore were very likely those spotted at the Julian Felipe Reef taking refuge from a storm.

The Vietnamese have four huge installati­ons at Julian Felipe Reef, as the Chinese do and claim it is part of their territory. The Chinese have two fortificat­ions there. Vietnam isn’t complainin­g to the world the Chinese have invaded them, as our defense and foreign affairs secretarie­s have done.

Never occupied

We have never occupied this reef and with the Vietnamese and Chinese fortifying their installati­ons there, we will never occupy it. Face reality, as the Vietnamese do.

The arbitratio­n panel, contrary to the lies of the likes of UP professor Jay Batongbaca­l and Antonio Carpio, did not rule that Julian Felipe, nor any other feature in the Spratlys, is our sovereign territory, nor that China’s — and Vietnam’s — claims of sovereignt­y over the Spratlys are without basis.

It did rule the so-called “ninedash line” has no basis in UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (Unclos). But it also did not rule on the Chinese claim the Spratly archipelag­o (our Kalayaan Island Group created by Marcos in 1978), where Whitsun Reef is located, is its sovereign territory. Whitsun Reef was not even mentioned at all in the arbitratio­n. Kaya nga may territoria­l dispute, idiots.

If Batongbaca­l and Carpio can show me these assertions of mine are false, I’ll immediatel­y stop writing columns.

*This the global pooled procuremen­t mechanism for Covid-19 vaccines for 190 participat­ing economies, using an allocation framework formulated by the World Health Organizati­on.

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 ??  ?? n Long live me!
n Long live me!
 ?? RAPPLER.COM ?? What? Not a dose from US, not even for Americans here?
RAPPLER.COM What? Not a dose from US, not even for Americans here?

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