Sun.Star Pampanga

Sri Lankan prison riot leaves 6 inmates dead, 35 injured

- 7

The U.K. has had Europe’s deadliest coronaviru­s outbreak, with more than 58,000 confirmed virus-related deaths. It now hopes to hit a more positive milestone by becoming one of the first countries in the world to start vaccinatin­g its population against COVID-19.

The U.K. government has agreed to buy more than 350 million doses of vaccines from seven different producers, should they prove effective, as it prepares to vaccinate as many of the country’s 67 million people as possible.

The Department of Health said Sunday it had increased its order for a vaccine developed by U.S. firm Moderna from 5 million to 7 million doses, enough for 3.5 million people.

The Moderna vaccine is expected to be referred soon to the U.K.’s Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency, to see if it is safe and effective. Two other vaccines — one developed by Pfizer and German firm BioNTech, the other by Oxford University and AstraZenec­a — are already being assessed by the regulator, the final stage before being rolled out.

Britain has ordered 40 million doses of the Pfizer/ BioNTech vaccine and 100 million doses of the Oxford/ AstraZenec­a vaccine.

Hospitals in England have been told they could receive the first doses of the Pfizer shot as early as the week of Dec. 7 if it receives approval, the Guardian and Financial Times reported. The U.S. vaccinatio­n program also hopes to begin inoculatin­g some Americans in December.

The government says frontline health care workers and nursing home residents will be the first to be vaccinated, followed by older people, starting with those over 80. The plan is to work down the age and risk groups until everyone 18 and over has been inoculated.

Peter Openshaw, professor of experiment­al medicine at Imperial College London, said he “wouldn’t be too surprised if an announceme­nt would be made within the next two weeks, possibly even as early as next week.”

Non-medical staff including volunteer firstaider­s are already being trained to give the shots, which will be administer­ed at around 1,000 community vaccinatio­n centers and 40 to 50 large-scale facilities in stadiums and conference venues, according to a government planning document.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said officials hope to vaccinate “the vast majority of the people who need the most protection by Easter.”

Writing in the Mail on Sunday, Johnson said the roll-out of a vaccine could be “just days away.” But he said there would not be a quick end to the onerous restrictio­ns on business and everyday life that have been imposed to curb the spread of the virus.

“There are still long weeks and months ahead before we can be completely confident that we can vaccinate enough people in the country, and thereby remove enough targets for the virus, in order to beat the disease,” he wrote.

A four-week national lockdown in England is due to end Wednesday, and will be replaced by a three-tiered system of regional measures. The vast majority of the country is being put into the upper two tiers, meaning most people will be barred from meeting up with friends indoors, pubs and restaurant­s still face restrictio­ns and everything from large weddings to choir practices are being banned.

Pfizer and BioNTech say their vaccine is 95% effective, according to preliminar­y data. It must be stored at ultracold temperatur­es of around minus 70 degrees Celsius (minus 94 Fahrenheit). The Moderna vaccine, which also needs to be stored at freezer temperatur­es, was also about 95% effective in clinical trials, the company said.

The OxfordAstr­aZeneca vaccine can be stored at convention­al refrigerat­or temperatur­es, making its distributi­on much simpler, and is also cheaper than its main rivals. But some scientists have questioned gaps in its reported results.

Oxf or d and AstraZenec­a reported this week that their vaccine appeared to be 62% effective in people who received two doses, and 90% effective when volunteers were given a half dose followed by a full dose. They said the half dose was administer­ed because of a manufactur­ing error, and they plan a new clinical trial to investigat­e the most effective dosing regimen.

Full data from the Oxford-AstraZenec­a trial is expected to be published soon, and may answer some of the questions about the vaccine.

Openshaw said he’d be happy to get any vaccine that is approved.

“If my GP rings me and says ‘I’ve got an approved vaccine,’I really don’t care which one it is,” he told the BBC. ---AP

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) — Six inmates were killed and 35 others were injured when guards opened fire to control a riot at a prison on the outskirts of Sri Lanka’s capital, officials said Monday. Two guards were critically injured, they said.

Pandemic-related unrest has been growing in Sri Lanka’s overcrowde­d prisons. Inmates have staged protests in recent weeks at several prisons as the number of coronaviru­s cases surges in the facilit i es.

Police spokesman Ajith Rohana said inmates created “unrest” Sunday at Mahara prison, about 15 kilometers (10 miles) north of Colombo, and officials attempted to control the situation.

But “the unrest situation turned into a prison riot,” he said, adding that prisoners tried to take control of the prison and hundreds attempted to escape.

The inmates “reportedly destroyed most of the property including offices inside the prison,” Rohana sai d.

The guards opened fire, and the clash left six inmates dead and 35 injured, he said. Two prison officers were critically injured.

He said hundreds of additional police were deployed to help the guards and strengthen security around the prison.

An inmate was killed in similar unrest at another prison last week. Another died in March.

More than a thousand inmates in five prisons have tested positive for the coronaviru­s and at least two have died. About 50 prison guards have also tested positive.

Sri Lankan prisons are highly congested with more than 26,000 inmates crowded into facilities with a capacity of 10,000.

Senaka Perera, a lawyer with the Committee for Protecting Rights of Prisoners, said the inmates had been frustrated because their pleas for coronaviru­s testing and the separation of infected prisoners had been ignored by officials for more than a month.

Sri Lanka has experience­d an upsurge in the disease since last month when two clusters — one centered at a garment factory and other at a fish market — emerged in Colombo and its suburbs.

Confirmed cases from the two clusters have reached 19,449. Sri Lanka has reported a total number of 22,988 coronaviru­s cases, including 109 fatalities. ---AP

ONDON (AP) — Britain said Sunday it has secured 2 million more doses of a promising coronaviru­s vaccine as it gears up to launch within days the country’s most ambitious inoculatio­n program in decades.

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