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India launches huge COVID vaccine drive

Modi urges citizens to ignore skeptics, praises quick rollout of injections

- By XU WEIWEI in Hong Kong vivienxu@chinadaily­apac.com

An Indian sanitation worker has begun what is set to be the world’s largest vaccinatio­n campaign against COVID-19. Receiving the first injection in Delhi on Jan 16, Manish Kumar, 33, became an instant popular name in India’s media.

“These vaccines will help India win the battle against the virus,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi told healthcare workers in a video conference on Jan 16.

The immunizati­on campaign with more than 1.3 billion people is part of the global effort to fight the virus. India’s COVID-19 infection tally rose to 10,595,660 on Jan 20, the secondhigh­est in the world after that of the United States, and its death toll reached 152,718, India’s Ministry of Health and Family Welfare said.

Modi’s office said earlier that “this will be the world’s largest vaccinatio­n program, covering the entire length and breadth of the country”.

“Considerin­g the portion of the world’s total population in India, the vaccinatio­n effort will certainly contribute to humankind’s battle against the virus,” said Hu Shisheng, director of the Institute of South Asian Studies at the China Institutes of Contempora­ry

Internatio­nal Relations in Beijing.

On the first day of inoculatio­ns about 100 people were voluntaril­y vaccinated in each of the 3,006 centers in India using a local vaccine, Covaxin, produced by Bharat Biotech and using a joint product, the government said.

“A vaccine, which was earlier believed to be impossible in such a short time period, has become a reality thanks to efforts of our scientists, doctors and innovators,” Modi said on Jan 16. “India is ready to do everything possible for a healthy planet.”

Hu said: “It is not surprising at all that India is able to produce its own vaccines. Though India lags behind in many fields such as machinery, the country is known for its pharmaceut­ical industry, with a few leading drug enterprise­s, thus it can be said that its domestical­ly made vaccines will have good efficiency and be relied upon.”

Indian pharmaceut­ical companies have always worked closely with other countries, especially China, in various fields, Hu said.

India’s health minister, Harsh Vardhan, had earlier said COVID-19 vaccines would be made available free across the country.

Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng Minister Prakash Javadekar, said earlier

that a coronaviru­s vaccine developed by AstraZenec­a and Oxford University being produced locally by the Serum Institute of India, the world’s largest vaccine maker by volume, was approved on Jan 1.

It was reported that Modi would not immediatel­y take the vaccine himself, with nurses, doctors and other essential workers being the priority. Thirty million frontline workers will be included in the first phase of inoculatio­ns, and nearly 300 million will have been vaccinated by the end of the second phase, Modi said.

He urged Indians to get vaccinated and not pay heed to any anti-vaccine propaganda.

Li Jiasheng, a researcher on internatio­nal relationsh­ips focusing on South Asia at Xi’an Jiaotong University of China, said: “Pandemic control and vaccinatio­n are not one thing. They are separate efforts in India.”

However, a marketing profession­al in Bangalore, aged 29, who did not want to be identified said that not only did some in India think being vaccinated was a waste of time, others

maintained that COVID-19 is a myth.

He was skeptical about vaccines eventually being free for everyone, he said.

“For example, some private hospitals can take advantage of it to make profit.”

Li said: “The vaccine drive will put to the test the implementa­tion and ability of the Indian government, because its states are loosely connected to each other. The Indian government needs to show its strong governance to win this combat with the pandemic.”

 ?? DANISH SIDDIQUI TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY / REUTERS ?? A healthcare worker receives a dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, made in India, in the eastern state of Odisha on Jan 16.
DANISH SIDDIQUI TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY / REUTERS A healthcare worker receives a dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, made in India, in the eastern state of Odisha on Jan 16.

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