Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Modi never bought enough vaccines; Now the world is paying

- By Debasish Roy Chowdhury (TIME)

Subrahmany­am Jaishankar is on a thankless mission. For the Indian external affairs minister, the official trip to the US this week – the first by a senior Indian minister since President Joe Biden took office – is awkwardly timed, coming as it does on the heels of a dust-up between the Indian government and American social media platforms Twitter and WhatsApp. As if his core task on the trip – procuring Covid-19 vaccines for India – wasn’t challengin­g enough.

India continues to reel from a severe coronaviru­s outbreak, with more than 200,000 reported cases and 4,000 deaths recorded each day – a tragedy made worse by an acute vaccine shortage. Jaishankar is tasked with meeting top US officials and vaccine manufactur­ers to secure supply deals. Biden has agreed to ship 80 million doses of vaccine to needy countries, and India hopes to land as many of those as it can. It needs vaccine desperatel­y; vaccinatio­n numbers for May dropped by half from April. More than 1 million Indians are estimated to have died in the pandemic (the official death toll is 315,000, which experts agree is understate­d.)

India has come a long way in a short time – from the swaggering Vaccine Guru boasting about saving the world, to desperatel­y scouring the globe for vaccines. For the world’s biggest vaccine manufactur­er, it’s not easy to go hat- in- hand asking for vaccines, and India’s foreign minister is trying to keep it classy. He is making pious noises. Countries must look beyond their “national interests” for “global good,” he said. Funny he should mention that, because it’s India’s vaccine nationalis­m – along with PM Narendra Modi’s empty showboatin­g – that not only plunged India into an unexpected vaccine shortage, but also put countries banking on vaccines from India at risk.

India has now blocked vaccine exports in order to prioritise vaccinatin­g its own citizens – simply grabbing the vaccines meant for others. This is threatenin­g to wreck the global COVAX programme meant to ensure equitable vaccine distributi­on to help poor nations, creating the risk of a prolonged pandemic for the whole world.

The vaccine crisis that stares at the world’s most vulnerable countries today is rooted in Modi’s mind- boggling reluctance to buy enough vaccines in time. As early as August 2020, Modi grandly declared that India had already worked out a vaccine distributi­on plan. Yet, he placed the first vaccine order as late as January 2021. And, even then, bought little. The result: by the time the second wave hit India with full intensity in April, just 0.5% of Indians had been fully vaccinated. The figure currently stands at a measly 3.1%. No national leader has talked so much about vaccines and done so little about it, and Indians are not the only ones paying the price for it.

Serum Institute of India, maker of the Oxford-Astra Zeneca vaccine that accounts for 90% of Indian Covid-19 doses, was slotted to supply half of the 2 billion vaccines for COVAX this year. But it has stopped shipments since March and says it can’t restart supplies until the end of the year. Facing pressure for vaccines at home and abroad, owner and CEO Adar Poonawalla has fled to London. With Serum Institutes’s global supplies on hold, uncertaint­y looms for 92 low-income and lower-middle-income countries that were depending on COVAX. Even if they find new suppliers, it will be months before the vaccines materialis­e. Serum Institutes’s cop-out means COVAX will be short of 190 million doses by the end of June, while nearly a dozen countries, many of them in Africa, have yet to get a single dose.

In India’s neighbourh­ood, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka are running dangerousl­y low on vaccines. Nepal is facing a double whammy of disastrous infection rates and depleting vaccine stocks. From just 152 cases on April 1, it’s now clocking more than 8,000 cases a day, straining its feeble healthcare infrastruc­ture. It had bought 2 million doses from Serum Institute, But the company stopped supplies after delivering the first 1 million doses as demand in India rose. It’s the same story for many other countries.

Insufficie­nt orders from India lay at the heart of Serum Institute’s troubles– and those of the world. Up until late March, the government wouldn’t let the anyone forget that India had supplied more vaccines globally than it had vaccinated its own people. It framed this as an act of national greatness – when it was in reality murderous miserlines­s on part of the world’s sixth-largest economy.

By reneging on the obligation to export vaccines, India has helped reproduce its domestic gulf between vaccine haves and have-nots on a global scale. Modi first put the lives of his own people at risk by not putting money where his mouth was. Then, when it all went horribly wrong, he forced Indian companies to break their word on vaccine deliveries, endangerin­g millions of others the world over by depriving them of vaccines. No amount of disingenuo­us fluff on “global good” now will hide that fact.

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