Wapakoneta Daily News

Putin wants to approve vaccine

- By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV

MOSCOW — Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday voiced hope for a quick approval of the country’s Sputnik V coronaviru­s vaccine

by the World Health Organizati­on, saying the move is essential to expand its global supplies.

Speaking during a video call with Francesco Rocca, president of the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, Putin

said receiving the WHO’S vetting is necessary to spread the Russian vaccine more broadly around the world, including free supplies.

“We intend to expand such assistance,” Putin said.

The Russian leader also argued that WHO’S approval should open the door for Russians and others who have had the Sputnik V vaccine to travel more freely around the world. He said about 200 million people worldwide have received Sputnik V.

Putin was vaccinated with Sputnik V in the spring, and last month he received a booster shot of Sputnik Light, the one-dose version.

He also said he took an experiment­al nasal version of Sputnik V days after receiving his

booster shot, adding that he was feeling fine and felt no side effects.

The Gamaleya Institute that developed Sputnik V has said the vaccine should be efficient against the omicron variant of COVID-19, but announced that it will immediatel­y start working on adapting it to counter the new variant.

Russia was the first country in the world to authorize a coronaviru­s vaccine, launching

Sputnik V in August 2020, and has plentiful supplies. But uptake has been slow, blamed in part on conflictin­g signals from Russian authoritie­s.

Russia in recent months has faced its deadliest and largest surge of coronaviru­s cases, with infections and deaths climbing to all-time highs and only slowing in the last few weeks. Russia

has Europe’s highest confirmed pandemic death toll at over 281,000, according to the government’s coronaviru­s task force. But a report released Friday by the state statistics agency Rosstat, which uses broader criteria, put the the

overall number of virus-linked deaths between April 2020 and October 2021 to over 537,000 — almost twice the official toll.

Putin, who despite a surge in infections in Russia has repeatedly argued that vaccinatio­ns

should remain voluntary, emphasized Sunday that Russian authoritie­s have been tried to use “persuasion and not pressure” and worked to dispel “prejudices and myths driving the aversion to vaccinatio­n.”

Russia’s quick approval of Sputnik V drew criticism abroad, because at the time it had only

been tested on a few dozen people. But a study published in British medical journal The Lancet

in February showed the Sputnik V is 91% effective and appears to prevent inoculated individual­s from becoming severely ill with COVID-19.

Russia has actively promoted Sputnik V around the world but faced bottleneck­s in shipping the amounts it promised. Countries in Latin America have complained about delays in getting the second Sputnik V shot.

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