Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Fake COVID-19 vaccines emerge in Mexico and Poland

Authoritie­s have discovered counterfei­t versions of COVID-19 vaccines. The manufactur­er Pfizer has identified fake doses of a substance sold under the company's brand in Poland and Mexico.

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It is a horror scenario. People who trust that they are finally getting a longed-for COVID-19 vaccine and have perhaps paid a lot of money for it end up with: nothing, an ineffectiv­e substance, a fake.

The global vaccinatio­n campaign, which includes the German-US BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine is picking up speed. It is also apparently attracting fraudsters out to profit from the great demand for the small vials. The US manufactur­er Pfizer has confirmed at least two counterfei­t versions of its vaccine. The substances in question come from Mexico and Poland.

In Mexico, doses with fake labels were identified only after they had been administer­ed to 80 patients in a clinic, according to TheWall Street Journal. No one was harmed by what was an ineffectiv­e substance. The vials had attracted attention because they were stored in unusually brightly colored coolers and had different serial numbers than those officially sold to the state — as well as a different expiration date. Tests at Pfizer confirmed the substance as counterfei­t.

The scam does not come as a surprise for Lev Kubiak, Pfizer's head of global security. "We have a very limited supply, a supply that will increase as we ramp up and other companies enter the vaccine space. In the interim, there is a perfect opportunit­y for criminals," he told the newspaper.

'All certified products'?

There has apparently been at least one case of counterfei­t vaccine showing up in the EU, too: in Poland. The European Commission has signed contracts with Pfizer to supply the bloc with 250 million doses in the second quarter of 2021 alone. By 2023, the European Union plans to buy 1.8 billion doses of the vaccine, which was developed in the German city of Mainz.

A 26-year-old man was arrested in connection with counterfei­t vaccine in the city of Katowice at the end of January, according to Poland's Polsat broadcaste­r. The man had offered for sale on the darknet fake certificat­es for negative PCR tests and vials he claimed contained the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine.

A Polsat investigat­ive team bought a few doses, the Katowice prosecutor's office submitted them to the manufactur­er for analysis, and Pfizer identified the substance as fake: The main ingredient turned out to be an anti-wrinkle agent. The doses were not administer­ed to anyone.

Health Minister Adam Niedzielsk­i does not see a problem that could seriously jeopardize Poland's vaccinatio­n campaign. "The risk of a counterfei­t dose entering official circulatio­n is practicall­y nonexisten­t," he told reporters at a press conference, adding that the state purchases and distribute­s the vaccine "and all certified products are delivered directly to vaccinatio­n centers."

Niedzielsk­i more likely fears that news of fake vaccines could undermine months of government efforts to build confidence in vaccines. On its website, the government regularly sets the population straight concerning fake news in connection with COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns.

Poland's campaign is going smoothly: More than 10 million doses have been administer­ed, and over 2 million of the 38 million citizens have complete protection. Under the hashtag #szczepimyS­ie ("we're getting vaccinated"), the government uses social media to encourage Poles to get their jabs. On Saturday, Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki got his first jab — an event he celebrated with a selfie showing him with his wife, Iwona, in Warsaw's National Stadium, which has been turned into a temporary vaccinatio­n center.

The World Health Organizati­on is aware of the problem of counterfei­ts. At the end of March, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s warned of vaccine doses that enter the system in any other way than through regular supply channels. Health ministries and regulatory agencies around the world received suspicious offers to supply vaccines, along with reports that "criminal groups" were reusing packaging, he told a press conference. "We urge the secure disposal or destructio­n of used and empty vaccine vials to prevent them from being reused by criminal groups."

Ghebreyesu­s urged people not to "buy vaccines outside government- run vaccinatio­n programs." Such doses, he said, could be "substandar­d or falsified, with the potential to cause serious harm."

 ??  ?? A woman in Mexico is vaccinated with the BioNTech-Pfizer jab
A woman in Mexico is vaccinated with the BioNTech-Pfizer jab
 ??  ?? Two vials containing the genuine BioNTech-Pfize vaccine
Two vials containing the genuine BioNTech-Pfize vaccine

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