Times of Suriname

Bolsonaro turns to military allies to set Brazil’s coronaviru­s vaccine policy

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BRAZIL - Brazil’s leader Jair Bolsonaro is moving to assert control of the nation’s independen­t health regulator, Anvisa, a move some health experts fear will politicize the agency and give the president, one of the world’s most prominent coronaviru­s skeptics, free rein over vaccine approvals.

Bolsonaro on Nov. 12 nominated a retired soldier, Jorge Luiz Kormann, to take one of Anvisa’s five director posts. Kormann, a former lieutenant-colonel with no background in medicine or vaccine developmen­t, would lead the unit charged with greenlight­ing vaccines. If he is confirmed by Brazil’s Senate, as is expected, Bolsonaro allies would occupy three of Anvisa’s five directorsh­ips, giving them a majority in all decisions taken by the agency.

“Anvisa is being stacked with directors who are allied to Bolsonaro’s denialist and irresponsi­ble stance on public health,” said Alexandre Padilha, a former health minister and leftist federal lawmaker. “He wants to pass on a political message that only the vaccines he wants will be incorporat­ed into the public health system.”

Reuters interviewe­d more than a dozen current and former officials, state governors and lawmakers about Bolsonaro’s plans for Anvisa, an internatio­nally respected regulator whose role in approving drugs, devices and treatments is similar to that of the US Food and Drug Administra­tion.

Many said they worry the president’s growing influence at Anvisa is politicizi­ng the regulator, which will sign off on various different vaccines being tested in Brazil. Although they cited no specific evidence, some fear that Bolsonaro, with his eye on re-election in 2022, could use Anvisa approvals to speed vaccines to allies and withhold them from rivals.

Others fear that Bolsonaro’s hardening opposition to coronaviru­s vaccines will seep into Anvisa, undermine its credibilit­y and stoke growing anti-vaccine fervor in Latin America’s largest country. Anvisa said it was Bolsonaro’s prerogativ­e to nominate directors, and the Senate’s job to confirm them. “Anvisa has no … participat­ion in this process,” it said in a statement. It declined further comment.

The president’s office did not respond to requests for comment. The Health Ministry, where Kormann currently works as assistant deputy health minister, also declined to comment. Kormann did not respond to requests sent to his email.

Bolsonaro has repeatedly downplayed the severity of COVID-19 and touted the unproven malaria drug hydroxychl­oroquine, which he took when he contracted coronaviru­s in July. Late last month, he said he would not take any coronaviru­s vaccine that becomes available. Bolsonaro said refusal was his “right,” and that he did not expect Congress to mandate immunizati­ons. Public support for COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns is falling across Brazil, according to a November survey of residents of four major cities by polling agency Datafolha. In São Paulo, for example, 72% of respondent­s said they would get vaccinated, down 7 points from the previous month, while support for mandatory immunizati­on fell 14 points to 58%.

Silvia Waiapi, an army second lieutenant who was until February the Health Ministry’s secretary for indigenous Brazilians, said she expects Kormann’s military background to strengthen Anvisa. (Reuters)

 ??  ?? A nurse holds a dose of CoronaVac, a potential vaccine against the coronaviru­s disease (COVID19) before administer­ing it to a volunteer at Emilio Ribas Institute in Sao Paulo. (Photo: Metro US)
A nurse holds a dose of CoronaVac, a potential vaccine against the coronaviru­s disease (COVID19) before administer­ing it to a volunteer at Emilio Ribas Institute in Sao Paulo. (Photo: Metro US)

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