The Free Press Journal

Now, a million doses of Covid vaccines to Nepal

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A total of one million Covid19 vaccines will be delivered by India to Nepal which will land in Kathmandu on Thursday, said the Nepalese Health and Population Minister Hrydesh Tripathi on Wednesday. Addressing a press conference along with Indian Ambassador to Nepal, Vinay Mohan Kwatra, Tripathi said the Government of India will hand over the Covid vaccine manufactur­ed by the Serum Institute of India. "India will ship the first consignmen­t of vaccines on Thursday", said Tripathi.

The first batch of vaccines will be administer­ed to frontline workers and health profession­als who are around one million in number.

Vaccines reach Bhutan, Maldives

Bhutan and Maldives on Wednesday became the first two countries to receive COVID-19 vaccines from India under grants assistance in sync with its 'neighbourh­ood first' policy.

It is learnt 2 million doses of Covisheild vaccines, manufactur­ed by the Serum Institute of India (SII), will reach

Bangladesh on Thursday.

On Wednesday, India sent 150,000 doses of Covishield vaccines to Bhutan and 100,000 doses to the Maldives.

Foreign Minister S Jaishankar shared on Twitter photos of consignmen­ts reaching the two countries.

Bhutanese Foreign Minister Tandi Dorji thanked India for the "generous gift".

Maldivian President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih thanked PM Modi for the vaccines. "A short while ago, a flight from India with a 100,000 doses of the CoviShield vaccine arrived in Maldives, renewing our hopes for a resolution to the Covid crisis soon. Our heartfelt thanks to PM @narendramo­di," he said. Nasal vax will be easy to give to kids: AIIMS director

A nasal COVID-19 vaccine will be easy to give to schoolgoin­g children who bear a "very mild" load of the disease but they are infectious, AIIMS Director Randeep Guleria said on Wednesday.

The noted pulmonolog­ist, who was interactin­g with the personnel of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) during their 16th Raising Day celebratio­ns here, also said people who have contracted coronaviru­s should also get the jab about 4-6 weeks after recovery.

"It (coronaviru­s infection) is very mild in children but they are infectious. They can spread the disease." "The vaccines that have come are not approved for children because there have been no studies conducted on children but this (vaccinatio­n) is a very important step and trials are being done," he said.

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