China Daily Global Weekly

Stop playing vaccine games

Rich nations must end their dumping of close-to-expiry COVID jabs on Africa

- By ADHERE CAVINCE The writer is a scholar of internatio­nal relations. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

There is growing apprehensi­on in many African countries regarding COVID-19 vaccines donated by rich countries. Millions of doses shipped to the continent have had a short shelf life, leading to expiration before they could be administer­ed — a fact that is now compoundin­g Africa’s inoculatio­n bid.

Nigeria reportedly destroyed 1 million doses of expired COVID-19 vaccines in December. The problem appears to spring from rushed political decisions by rich countries to donate previously hoarded vaccines to developing countries.

Instead of receiving vaccines that might expire soon, poor countries are now turning them down. The United Nations Children’s Fund has said that developing countries turned down more than 100 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines that were about to expire by the end of last year. In addition, around 15 million doses of vaccines donated by the European Union were turned down by poor countries in October and November.

For a region like Africa that has vaccinated just 8 percent of the eligible population, turning down vaccines is a painful experience. Collective­ly, 85 percent of Africa’s population or about a billion people are yet to receive a single dose of COVID-19 vaccine, according to WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s.

Donating nearly expired vaccines to Africa has presented three main challenges.

First is the false hope that beneficiar­y countries would increase their vaccinatio­n numbers. Many African countries have no capacity to quickly distribute and administer vaccines with short life spans.

Second, affected African countries are now forced to invest in vaccine waste treatment instead of putting their meager resources into additional vaccine purchases.

Third, expired vaccines are driving a new form of vaccine apathy on the continent, with many people fearing that they could get expired vaccines.

This unfortunat­e scenario has forced the African Union to issue a strong advisory to countries that intend to donate COVID vaccines to the continent. Donors are now encouraged to declare in advance their intention to donate, including requisite numbers to be donated. In addition, donations should have a shelf life of not less than three months.

Sending soon-to-expire vaccines to Africa runs counter to the rhetoric by donor countries of showing solidarity with developing countries in the pandemic fight.

With weak health systems and doused economic vitality as a result of COVID-19, economies with few resources looked to vaccines as a rational and sustainabl­e way out of the pandemic.

Hardly surprising, though, it soon emerged that rich economies had preordered billions of doses of the COVID-19 vaccines, leaving few to be purchased by poor countries, most of which are located in Africa.

Pleas by the affected government­s, the WHO and regional organizati­ons such as the AU for equitable distributi­on of vaccines went unheeded.

The only sustainabl­e way to ensure that Africa has access to the vaccines it needs to protect its population is to encourage production on the continent.

An alternativ­e route for Africa is to consider proposals by countries such as China that are already implementi­ng joint vaccine production hubs in Africa.

The Forum on China-Africa Cooperatio­n 2021 commitment­s by China to donate 1 billion doses of COVID-19 vaccines, with 400 million doses produced on the continent, will not only enhance access to vaccines in Africa but also strengthen the continent’s industrial capacity and health systems.

Rapid, equitable and sustainabl­e vaccinatio­n is the ultimate way to beat the pandemic. Advanced economies should read from the same script as the rest of the world and jointly work to stem the tide of the global health crisis.

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