Business Day

France wants full access to vaccine

• Government rebukes company CEO who said US could have priority because of its funding

- Henri-Pierre André and Jean-Stéphane Brosse Paris

France said on Thursday equal access to any coronaviru­s vaccine developed by Sanofi is non-negotiable and that no country, such as the US, should have priority for financial reasons.

France on Thursday said equal access to any coronaviru­s vaccine developed by Sanofi was non-negotiable and that no country such as the US should have priority because of financial motivation­s.

The French government’s robust comments came a day after the CEO of the French pharmaceut­ical giant said vaccine doses produced in the US could go to US patients first, given the country had supported the research financiall­y.

As the French backlash grew, Sanofi, which had already flagged this possibilit­y in recent weeks and had urged stronger European co-ordination in the hunt for a vaccine, clarified that it would be made available to all.

“A vaccine against Covid-19 should be a public good for the world. The equal access of all to the virus is non-negotiable,” Prime Minister Edouard Philippe said on Twitter.

Philippe said he had reinforced this message to Sanofi’s chair, Serge Weinberg, who in return had assured the prime minister of the distributi­on in France of any Sanofi vaccine.

Sanofi has production sites in France. The company is working on two vaccine projects against Covid-19, one with British rival GlaxoSmith­Kline that has received financial support from the Biomedical Advanced Research and Developmen­t Authority of the US health department and another with US company Translate Bio that will use a different technology.

Junior economy minister Agnes Pannier-Runacher told Sud Radio it would be “unacceptab­le” if one country was awarded privileged access because of money.

Sanofi CEO Paul Hudson’s comments had upset President Emmanuel Macron, an Elysee Palace official said. A presidency official would meet Sanofi representa­tives next week, the official added.

“Evidently, if Sanofi makes a breakthrou­gh on a vaccine for Covid-19 and it is efficient, it will be made available to all,” Olivier Bogillot, the head of Sanofi in France, told French news channel BFM TV on Thursday.

The controvers­y has raised questions, however, over whether Europe has been too slow to respond in terms of organising and funding vaccine research.

Sanofi reiterated on Thursday that the US had moved more quickly in this regard. Sanofi added that it was in talks with the EU and the French and German government­s to expedite regional vaccine developmen­t.

Geoffroy Roux de Bezieux, the head of French business lobby Medef, said Europe could still catch up and ensure it gets access to a vaccine in a timely manner, but that the quick US action had shone a spotlight on its response.

The charity Oxfam said pharmaceut­ical companies should not be able to decide who lives and who dies.

Officials meeting at the World Health Assembly next week must demand that vaccines and tests are patent-free, Oxfam said in a statement. They should also be distribute­d equitably to all countries. “Government­s must work together to stop corporatio­ns profiteeri­ng from the pandemic and save the lives of people across the globe,” it said.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Shot down: Sanofi, which has its headquarte­rs in Paris, France, has been at the centre of a backlash after its CEO said vaccine doses produced in the US could go to US patients first.
/Reuters Shot down: Sanofi, which has its headquarte­rs in Paris, France, has been at the centre of a backlash after its CEO said vaccine doses produced in the US could go to US patients first.

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