New Era

Geingob must get first jab – Swanu

- ■ Loide Jason – ljason@nepc.com.na

SWANU leader Tangeni Iijambo believes President Hage Geingob should be the first Namibian to be inoculated against Covid-19 once the early batch of doses arrive in the country. According to Iijambo, this will maximise trust and confidence in the roll-out of the Covid-19 vaccinatio­n programme.

“There is a need for maximum transparen­cy due to lingering concerns, confusion, doubts and uncertaint­y in a sea of disinforma­tion, lies, conspiracy theories, fake news and hidden agendas on mainstream and social media as to the efficacy and even the safety of the vaccines available on the market,” Iijambo told journalist­s yesterday.

The Swanu parliament­arian also suggested that members of both houses of parliament should volunteer to be among the first to be vaccinated, “as a demonstrat­ion that they are fully and wellinform­ed about the safety of the vaccines and create public trust and confidence in the exercise”.

Health minister Dr Kalumbi Shangula was not available for comment yesterday afternoon. Shangula last month said the country had secured a Covid-19 vaccine for health workers and the vulnerable, which was due to arrive this month.

According to Shangula, the national vaccine taskforce was busy at work to put mechanisms and logistics in place to roll out the vaccine.

Shangula explained that the government will prioritise frontline healthcare workers, the vulnerable and severe Covid-19 patients once the vaccine becomes available.

Media reports, however, yesterday suggested Namibia is only expected to take delivery of the first batch of Covid-19 vaccine doses sometime next month and not this month as initially declared by the health authoritie­s.

NEFF enters fray

Meanwhile, the Namibian Economic Freedom Fighters (NEFF) called on Shangula not to rush into vaccinatin­g Namibians against Covid-19. NEFF national coordinato­r Kalimbo Iipumbu urged Shangula to first ensure that the vaccine is safe and it would not harm Namibians.

“We are curiously warning our minister of health that by acquiring this said vaccine there must be proper evidence that this vaccine may not harm the nation; he must be careful, he should not be in a hurry to try these vaccines without total research,” Iipumbu told journalist­s yesterday.

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Almost here… An Emirates Airlines Boing 777 plane unloads a coronaviru­s vaccine shipment at Dubai Internatio­nal Airport on Monday.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Almost here… An Emirates Airlines Boing 777 plane unloads a coronaviru­s vaccine shipment at Dubai Internatio­nal Airport on Monday.

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