The Mercury

We must look east, and to China – again

- WESLEY SEALE Seale’s PhD is on Sino-South African relations.

SOUTH Africa’s vaccine roll-out programme seems to have hit a bit of turbulence. In this past week, the government temporaril­y suspended the administra­tion of the Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine.

This was after the US Food and Drug Administra­tion revealed the potential link between the vaccine and a rare type of blood clot.

The suspension of the US J&J vaccine comes in the wake of the government’s request for the Serum Institute of India to take back the 1 million doses of the AstraZenec­a vaccine which the company sent to our country in early February.

Besides issues of expiry dates and the inability of that vaccine to fight South Africa’s Covid-19 variant, the government is said to have eventually sold these doses to countries on the continent.

What comes as no surprise are the revelation­s by Health Minister Dr Zweli Mkhize – that J&J would not supply 20 million doses of its vaccine, which is now being seriously questioned, until our government supported an investment in a particular company here in South Africa.

According to Mkhize, he made this known “to demonstrat­e to members (of Parliament) some of the difficult

and sometimes unreasonab­le terms and preconditi­ons that we have had to navigate.”

One cannot help but once again point to China in leading not only the rolling out of its vaccine programme, but the production of its own vaccines against Covid-19.

The strategic advisory group of experts on immunisati­on of the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) have indicated that two of the Chinese vaccines, Sinovac and Sinopharm, have “demonstrat­ed safety and good efficacy against symptomati­c Covid-19 disease”. These vaccines are likely to be included on the emergency use list of the WHO by the end of April.

Sinovac and Sinopharm are only

two of the four Chinese-produced vaccines. While these two have been exported to at least 70 countries, Hungary and Serbia have reportedly accredited the vaccines with emergency use approval status.

The Ukraine has also announced a completion of its studies on Sinovac’s vaccine and has commenced a programme of rolling out the shots to its people.

Yet confidence in the Chinese vaccines has not only come from WHO, European countries such as Hungary, Serbia and Ukraine, but diplomats resident in China have also indicated their reception of the Sino shots.

The Mexican and Iranian embassies Beijing, for example, are among in those who have advertised endorsed the locally produced

While Argentinia­n health minister Carla Vizzotti tweeted about the Sinopharm vaccine that “the Phase III trial showed an acceptable profile of immunogeni­city, efficacy and safety, no serious adverse events”, in Brazil, the clinical trials of the Chinese vaccines are also said to be in their final stages.

In the absence of a locally produced vaccine, we should be asking why we are not procuring vaccines from our strategic Chinese partners.

Since 2007, the relationsh­ip between China and South Africa has experience­d exponentia­l growth, especially economical­ly, but sadly we are not hearing about our government procuring Chinese-made vaccines.

Even Zimbabwe is reported to be receiving its second batch of vaccines from China.

In the face of vaccine nationalis­m from the West, it makes no sense that South Africa is not looking east once again to acquire the much-needed vaccines.

Not only are we behind in rolling out the shots but we are grossly behind in purchasing them.

We must be able to rely on our developing world partners, especially China, to ensure that we ensure the health security of our people just as we relied on our eastern partners to build our economy after colonialis­m and the 2009 global financial crisis.

We will be fooled once again if we were to think that help will come from the West. and vaccines.

 ??  ??
 ?? | AFP ?? WORKERS offload part of a consignmen­t of the Sinopharm Covid-19 vaccine from China off an Air Zimbabwe plane recently. It is one of two Chinese vaccines that the World Health Organizati­on says has demonstrat­ed safety and efficacy against Covid-19. Yet South Africa has yet to procure these from our strategic trading partner, says the writer.
| AFP WORKERS offload part of a consignmen­t of the Sinopharm Covid-19 vaccine from China off an Air Zimbabwe plane recently. It is one of two Chinese vaccines that the World Health Organizati­on says has demonstrat­ed safety and efficacy against Covid-19. Yet South Africa has yet to procure these from our strategic trading partner, says the writer.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa