The Jerusalem Post

Pfizer delays more vaccines after Israel fails to pay

700,000 doses were expected to arrive on Sunday • Ministers bicker over who is delaying payment

- • By MAAYAN HOFFMAN

Pfizer has delayed shipments of coronaviru­s vaccines to Israel in outrage over the country failing to transfer payment for the last 2.5 million doses it supplied to the country, The Jerusalem Post has learned.

Senior officials at Pfizer have said they are concerned that the government-in-transition will not pay up and the company does not want to be taken advantage of. They said that they do not understand how such a situation can occur in an organized country.

Army Radio reported that Pfizer called Israel a “banana republic.”

A shipment of 700,000 doses was expected to arrive in Israel on Sunday but was delayed until further notice.

Pfizer told the Post that the company has completed all deliveries to Israel under its initial agreement to provide its COVID-19 vaccine, signed in November 2020.

“The company is currently working with the Israeli government to update the agreement, to supply additional vaccines to the country. While this work continues, shipments may be adjusted,” the company said in a statement.

The Health Ministry would not comment on Pfizer’s statement.

Israel paid for the first 10 million vaccines it received to manage the majority of its mass vaccinatio­n campaign. But when Israel started to run short in February, an agreement was made between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla to supply the country with the additional doses it needed.

The Post was informed that the government never paid for the last 2.5 million.

So far, Israel has spent NIS 2.6 billion on coronaviru­s vaccines, it was revealed last month at a meeting of the Knesset Finance Committee. In general, the government does not discuss the cost of vaccines due to confidenti­ality agreements with the companies. It is understood that Israel paid much more per dose than any other country.

The Health Ministry had been putting pressure on the government to approve the purchase of more than 30 million more vaccine doses even before Passover – costing an additional NIS 3.5 billion – and the government was set to convene last Monday. However, the meeting was postponed indefinite­ly due to a conflict between Netanyahu and Alternate Prime Minister Benny Gantz.

Gantz canceled the meeting because of Netanyahu’s refusal to approve the permanent appointmen­t of a justice minister. His term as acting justice minister ended on April 2, three months after he took the post in place of Avi Nissenkorn, who had resigned.

A permanent appointmen­t has still not been made.

HEALTH MINISTER Yuli Edelstein spoke with Gantz on Sunday night to persuade him of the importance of moving forward with the payment and purchase.

A spokeswoma­n for Gantz told the Post that, “even though the prime minister has done a lot to hurt the functionin­g of the government,” the alternate prime minister will “do nothing that will affect the people of Israel’s health by denying the vaccines.”

Nonetheles­s, sources in Gantz’s office stressed that if this meeting is so urgent for Edelstein, “all he has to do is call PM Netanyahu and ask him to appoint a justice minister.”

Gantz’s office further claimed that the purchase of the 2.5 million vaccines was already approved and that any delay in payment was on behalf of the Health Ministry.

The source said the country had already purchased 27 million doses – which includes the Pfizer, Moderna and AstraZenec­a vaccines – “that should suffice for the near future.” The source said procuremen­t of additional vaccines further down the line requires due process and deliberati­on.

Meanwhile, health officials are concerned that Israel will miss its opportunit­y to purchase the vaccines,

which are sought after by countries around the world.

Coronaviru­s commission­er Prof. Nachman Ash told the Post that if Israel does not speedily sign the necessary contracts, it may not be able to vaccinate its children or provide citizens with booster shots against vaccine-resistant variants, or if immunity wanes.

“There is real competitio­n to buy vaccines by countries around the world,” Ash said in an interview last week. “We want to reserve our place at the top of the list and not be pushed down to the end so that we cannot get them when they are most needed.”

PFIZER ANNOUNCED that its vaccine was safe and effective against the virus for children in this age cohort and is now seeking FDA approval. Health Ministry Director-General Chezy Levy said over the weekend that Israeli adolescent­s could be vaccinated as early as May.

The vaccinatio­n campaign has enabled Israel to open up its economy over the past month, including sending more children back to school on Monday.

The Health Ministry agreed to allow children in third grade to learn without capsules. Older students are still in capsules, which means that they still cannot go to school full time.

Ash told Ynet that the ministry wants to monitor whether there is a rise in infection after removing capsules in third grade. If not, then the rest of the country’s elementary school students will be able to study in full within the next two weeks.

The ministry has said it wants to roll out rapid testing for middle school students before allowing them to learn in their regular classrooms.

The Health Ministry reported on Monday that the number of patients in serious condition continued to drop and only 0.6% of the tests performed the day before returned a positive result, marking the lowest rate since May 2020. However, at the same time, the reproducti­on rate rose to 0.71 – a figure that has not been recorded for a month.

Some 195 new coronaviru­s cases were identified on Sunday out of 32,886 tests.

Although Israel consistent­ly performs fewer tests on Sundays than on other weekdays, the rate of the tests returning positive was the lowest since last May.

Moreover, the number of serious patients dropped to 323. They were 441 on the previous Monday and 543 the week before that.

Some 6,245 people have died of COVID-19 in Israel since the beginning of the pandemic.

The government is expected to convene a special cabinet meeting about the vaccines in the coming days. Sources in the Health Ministry say they are hoping that it won’t be too late.

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? MASKED PEOPLE shop in Jerusalem’s Mahaneh Yehuda market.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) MASKED PEOPLE shop in Jerusalem’s Mahaneh Yehuda market.

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