Global Times

Post- AZ jab deaths in Taiwan shed light on true face of DPP

- By Liu Caiyu

Deaths among those who had received the AstraZenec­a ( AZ) COVID- 19 vaccine in Taiwan have increased hesitation among the public to get jabs, with some criticizin­g the politicall­y driven policy made by the secessioni­st Democratic Progressiv­e Party ( DPP) authority as a shame to the island.

Two days after Taiwan started inoculatio­ns with the AZ vaccine that was delivered from Japan, the island recorded at least 13 deaths, although local authoritie­s were reluctant to classify those deaths as being related to the vaccine, local media said.

Most of those who died were aged between 60 and 90, and some had a history of chronic diseases. The sudden deaths after vaccinatio­n made many elder people and their relatives worried, and they feared that it would be all right if they did not get vaccinated, but there would be a danger to life if they did.

Kaohsiung on Thursday reduced the vaccinatio­n venues from the planned 34 to 27, and some sites had more medics than patients.

A Beijing- based immunologi­st told the Global Times on Thursday that some European nations such as Denmark had stopped using the AZ vaccine, although the European Medicines Agency listed the blood clots with low blood platelets that were strongly associated with the AZ vaccine, as a rare side effect.

The immunologi­st suggested that Taiwan should suspend administer­ing the AZ vaccine for the sake of public health, to allow more detailed investigat­ions and evaluation­s of its safety.

The deaths may not be directly related to the vaccine, but still some Taiwan netizens worried that Japan was just dumping the “questionab­le” vaccine on Taiwan. The AZ vaccine is not included in the inoculatio­n plan in Japan.

Wang Jianmin, a senior cross- Straits expert at Minnan Normal University, told the Global Times on Thursday that the deaths showed that Japan’s offer of the AZ vaccine was more of a humiliatio­n to the island.

Japan is considerin­g a second donation to the island after it sent 1.24 million AZ doses to Taiwan earlier this month, local media said.

Some Taiwan residents blamed the DPP, which would rather take the risk of questionab­le vaccines than accept vaccines offered by the Chinese mainland. Some are seeking other solutions, including flying to the mainland for vaccinatio­ns, amid an infection surge and vaccine shortage.

Some Taiwan internet users said they believed that the vaccine fiasco had answered the question “Are the DPP’s political interests more important than Taiwan residents’ lives?”

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