The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Indonesia leader gets nation’s first Covid-19 jab

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JAKARTA: Indonesian President Joko Widodo received the country’s first Covid-19 jab yesterday, as the sprawling archipelag­o of nearly 270 million kicked off a mass vaccinatio­n drive to clamp down on soaring case rates.

The 59-year-old leader, better known as Jokowi, was inoculated on live television at the state palace in Jakarta along with his health minister and several senior officials, as well as business and religious leaders.

“I don’t feel it at all,” he said with a laugh after receiving a dose of the Chinese-developed CoronaVac, the first of two required.

“This vaccinatio­n is important to break the chain of coronaviru­s infections and to give health protection to all of us, and safety and security for all Indonesian­s,” Jokowi told reporters, adding that it would “also help speed up the economic recovery”.

Domestic regulators had this week approved the CoronaVac shot, produced by Sinovac, announcing that its efficacy stood at 65.3 per cent, according to tests performed in Indonesia.

Tests done in hard-hit Brazil showed the Sinovac jab was highly effective in staving off moderate to serious virus cases. But overall, it was only about 50 per cent effective in preventing patients from contractin­g the disease.

While the vaccine has reached the minimum efficacy target of 50 per cent set by the World Health Organisati­on, it is well behind the shots developed by Moderna at 94 per cent and Pfizer-BioNTech at 95 per cent.

This week, Muslim-majority Indonesia’s top religious body also approved the vaccine as halal – meaning permissibl­e under Islam – in a move that could help convince wary citizens.

Previous vaccinatio­n drives have met resistance among some segments of the country’s huge population, the world’s fourth-largest. Health workers and other at-risk groups will get priority under an ambitious plan to inoculate nearly 182 million people over the next 15 months.

The Southeast Asian nation has also signed deals for nearly 330 million vaccine doses from a string of pharmaceut­ical companies including AstraZenec­a, Pfizer and Chinese suppliers such as Sinopharm.

Indonesia has reported nearly 850,000 Covid-19 cases and close to 25,000 deaths, but low testing rates mean the public health crisis is believed to be much bigger than the figures suggest.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Jokowi receiving the country’s first Covid-19 vaccine jab at the Presidenti­al Palace in Jakarta.
— AFP photo Jokowi receiving the country’s first Covid-19 vaccine jab at the Presidenti­al Palace in Jakarta.

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