The Guardian (USA)

US to send 4m AstraZenec­a vaccine doses to Mexico and Canada

- David Agren in Mexico City, Leyland Cecco in Toronto and agencies

The United States plans to send roughly 4m doses of AstraZenec­a’s Covid-19 vaccine that it is not using to Mexico and Canada in loan deals with the two countries.

Mexico will receive 2.5m doses of the vaccine and Canada will receive 1.5m doses, the official said.

“This virus has no borders,” an administra­tion official told Reuters. “We only put the virus behind us if we’re helping our global partners.”

The Biden administra­tion has come under growing pressure from allies to share vaccines, particular­ly from AstraZenec­a, which is authorized for use in other countries but not yet in the United States.

That pressure is particular­ly intense in neighbouri­ng Mexico and Canada, neither of which has the infrastruc­ture to provide enough vaccines for their population­s. Both countries share deeply interconne­cted economies with the US, but Washington has until now not approved any vaccine exports.

AstraZenec­a has millions of doses made in a US facility, and has said that it would have 30m shots ready at the beginning of April.

The Mexican foreign minister, Marcelo Ebrard, confirmed on Thursday that a vaccine agreement with the United States had been reached. Details are expected to be finalized in the coming days.

The news coincided with an announceme­nt that Mexico will close its northern and southern borders to non-essential travel, prompting speculatio­n that the two agreements were related.

Mexico has not imposed travel restrictio­ns during the pandemic and does not demand Covid tests from travellers. But it has been beefing up enforcemen­t to slow the stream of migrants heading to the US.

The White House spokeswoma­n, Jen Psaki, said the vaccines deal with Mexico and increased immigratio­n enforcemen­t were “unrelated”.

News of the deal comes as a relief for both Canada and Mexico.

“God bless America – they’re coming to our rescue,” said the Ontario premier, Doug Ford, following news of the deal. “That’s what true neighbours do.”

Public health officials in Canada fear that the country – especially its most populous province of Ontario – is headed for a third wave of infections. On Wednesday, the province’s scientific advisory table called for a strict threeweek lockdown to combat an explosion of cases linked to coronaviru­s variants.

Canada has secured a series of direct deals with pharmaceut­ical companies to secure its own supply, but vaccine distributi­on has also been held up by supply-chain issues.

Mexico’s government has boasted of having signed agreements with Russia, China and other providers to provide enough doses for its entire population, but the rollout of its vaccinatio­n programme has been dogged by delays.

“Mexico’s main problem starts with not buying vaccines on time,” said Xavier Tello, a health policy analyst in Mexico City. “Canada has vaccines but not an organized strategy. Mexico has no vaccines and no strategy.”

According to the World Health Organizati­on, nearly 80% of the vaccines manufactur­ed so far have been administer­ed in only 10 countries.

Canada ranks about 22nd in the number of doses administer­ed, with about 8% of the population getting at least one shot. That compares with 21% in the US and 25% in Chile. Mexico, meanwhile, has administer­ed jabs to

just 3.8% of its population.

Mexico has also pursued a quixotic and haphazard strategy, in which inhabitant­s of rural areas have been prioritize­d over city-dwellers – and even health workers.

“The problem from the beginning was there is no expert or head of the vaccinatio­n program in Mexico. Everything is done by different people in the cabinet, people who don’t have knowledge of vaccines,” said Roselyn LemusMarti­n, a Mexican Covid-19 researcher.

Mexico’s president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, had been calling on Biden to release the AstraZenec­a vaccines. He raised the issue when the two presidents spoke on 2 March.

“There’s a diplomatic case of: they’re my neighbours and it’s in the US interest that Mexico and Canada are vaccinated quickly,” Lemus-Martin said.

“If Mexico is not vaccinated, people who travel to the US, they’re going to probably bring new variants and there are going to probably be a surge of cases … especially with the new variants because we don’t know what variants are in Mexico,” where there is little testing.

The “releasable” vaccines are ready to be used once they arrive. Under the deal, the United States will share doses with Mexico and Canada now with the understand­ing that they will pay the United States back with doses in return. The official said that would take place later this year.

 ??  ?? The deal to share the vaccine, which is still being finalized, does not affect Joe Biden’s plans to have vaccine available for all adults in the US by the end of May. Photograph: Thilo Schmülgen/Reuters
The deal to share the vaccine, which is still being finalized, does not affect Joe Biden’s plans to have vaccine available for all adults in the US by the end of May. Photograph: Thilo Schmülgen/Reuters

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