China Daily (Hong Kong)

SE Asia jabs rollout gains momentum

Deliveries of China’s CoronaVac vaccine help to build confidence in region’s efforts

- By PRIME SARMIENTO in Hong Kong prime@chinadaily­apac.com Yang Han in Hong Kong and Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

Countries in Southeast Asia are bolstering their efforts against the coronaviru­s with shipments of a Chinese-developed COVID-19 vaccine.

On Sunday, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte was on hand for the arrival at a Manila airport of a batch of a vaccine from Sinovac Biotech, known as CoronaVac. A day earlier, Malaysian officials welcomed a shipment of the same vaccine in Malaysia.

And in Thailand, where supplies of CoronaVac landed in Bangkok on Wednesday, vaccinatio­ns began on Sunday. That developmen­t prompted the Prime Minister Prayut Chan-ocha to call it a historic day.

In Manila, the CoronaVac supplies were given by China as part of a promise made by Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi on a visit to the Philippine capital in January.

Vaccinatio­ns with CoronaVac were scheduled to begin on Monday, and they are expected to reduce the number of infections in the country and aid its economic recovery.

In a statement on his Facebook account, China’s Ambassador to the Philippine­s Huang Xilian said the vaccine donation attests to the “solidarity as well as profound friendship and partnershi­p” between China and the Philippine­s.

Health Secretary Francisco Duque III and the head of the national COVID-19 task force, Carlito Galvez, are expected to get the first jabs.

The Philippine­s, which has the second-highest number of COVID-19 cases in Southeast Asia, has been criticized for a slow vaccine rollout. There were 576,352 COVID-19 cases reported by Sunday, according to the Johns Hopkins University in the US.

Alicia Garcia-Herrero, chief economist for Asia-Pacific at the French investment bank Natixis, said the Philippine vaccine program is “not so late” and the economist expects the economy “will do fine” this year thanks to a “huge base effect” from last year.

In contrast, Victor Abola, senior economist at the University of Asia and the Pacific in Manila, said the tardy vaccine distributi­on will delay the country’s economic rebound.

Sunday’s CoronaVac delivery makes up part of the 5.1 million doses of vaccines scheduled to arrive in the Philippine­s in the first quarter.

In Bangkok, the shipment of CoronaVac on Wednesday amounted to 200,000 doses. The Thai Deputy Prime Minister and Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirak­ul was among the first officials to get the shots at the country’s main infectious diseases institute.

Prayut, who presided over the initial round of vaccinatio­ns, said no adverse reactions were reported.

‘A historic day’

“It’s a historic day and a day to help the country rebuild confidence against the pandemic,” he said.

In Kuala Lumpur, the arrival of the vaccine on Saturday at the city’s internatio­nal

airport brought together Chinese Ambassador Ouyang Yujing with Malaysian ministers.

The shipment amounted to 200 liters of the vaccine.

The cooperatio­n with China was “extremely important in ensuring that we could also include the Chinese vaccines in our portfolio”, Technology and Innovation Minister Khairy Jamaluddin said in a news briefing.

Nazihah Muhamad Noor, a public health researcher at the Khazanah Research Institute, a think tank in Kuala Lumpur, welcomed Malaysia’s vaccinatio­n progress. The country has “a great track record of carrying out past vaccinatio­n campaigns”, she said.

Nazihah said that one of the benefits of not being the first country to start on vaccinatio­ns is that Malaysia can learn from the experience­s of others.

 ?? XINHUA VIA MTI ?? Hungarian President Janos Ader is given a vaccine from Sinopharm on Friday.
XINHUA VIA MTI Hungarian President Janos Ader is given a vaccine from Sinopharm on Friday.

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