Manila Bulletin

P zer con rms fake vaccine shots on sale in Mexico, Poland

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WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) - US drugmaker Pfizer on Wednesday confirmed that suspect doses of its coronaviru­s vaccine that were seized in Mexico and Poland were indeed fake, with doses going for as much as $1,000 a shot, according to US media.

At a clinic in Mexico some 80 people received bogus doses of the drug, which appeared to have been physically harmless, though offering no protection against the potentiall­y deadly disease ravaging the country, a report in the Wall Street Journal said.

The vials were found in beer coolers and were initially identified by fabricated lot numbers and expiration dates, Mexican officials said.

The liquid in the confiscate­d vials in Poland was a cosmetic substance, thought to be anti-wrinkle cream, the company said.

‘’We are cognizant that in this type of environmen­t -fueled by the ease and convenienc­e of e-commerce and anonymity afforded by the internet -- there will be an increase in the prevalence of fraud, counterfei­t and other illicit activity as it relates to vaccines and treatments for COVID-19,’’ a Pfizer spokespers­on told ABC News.

Pfizer tested the bogus vials and found they did not contain the two-shot vaccine it developed with BioNTech.

Lev Kubiak, Pfizer’s head of global security, said the desperate need and the shortfall in vaccines had led to the scams.

Mexico is also examining a shipment of 6,000 doses of what is claimed to be the Russian vaccine Sputnik that were seized on a private plane headed for Honduras last month, the newspaper said.

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