Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Africa welcomes COVAX doses as officials denounce inequity

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KAMPALA, Uganda — Urgent calls for COVID-19 vaccine fairness rang through African countries Friday as more welcomed or rolled out doses from the global COVAX initiative, with officials acutely aware their continent needs much more.

“Rich countries should not be so selfish,” Pontiano Kaleebu, head of the Uganda Virus Research Institute, said as his country received its first doses. “It’s a concern, and everyone is talking about it.”

The East African nation of 45 million people was receiving under 1 million vaccine doses — 864,000, to be exact. It’s the first batch of a total of 18 million COVAX doses for Uganda, but when all will arrive is not known.

That number is “not going to do much,” said Monica Musenero, an epidemiolo­gist and presidenti­al adviser, though she added that “we can advocate for more vaccines, but we should also appreciate what we’ve got.”

The foundation of Nobel Peace Prize winner and former South African archbishop Desmond Tutu and his wife, Leah, on Friday issued a statement saying that “more must be done, immediatel­y, to ensure lower-income countries have faster access to COVID-19 vaccines, diagnostic tools and treatments.”

The foundation said a small number of rich countries hold the majority of vaccine doses.

“This is not a time for selfishnes­s,” its statement said, and it noted growing calls for a waiver of intellectu­al property rights to COVID-19 vaccines to allow for faster, wider production — a proposal opposed by the European Union and countries including the U.S., Britain and Canada.

While the COVAX initiative was created to ensure that low- and middle-income countries receive COVID-19 vaccines, it has faced delays andlimited supply.

Even as the World Health Organizati­on’s Africa chief, Matshidiso Moeti, noted Thursdayth­at almost 10 million COVAX doses had been delivered to 11 African countries, she could not resist adding, “finally.”

“We expect about half of African countries will receive COVAX deliveries in the coming week and that most countries will have vaccinatio­n programs under way by end of March,” she added.

Mali on Friday received 396,000 doses of the AstraZenec­a vaccine. And Nigeria began its vaccinatio­n campaignaf­ter Africa’s most populous country received almost4 million doses.

In Kenya, vaccinatio­ns with 1 million doses began a day after President Uhuru Kenyatta said that “vaccine nationalis­m is something thatwe should all abhor.”

The president encouraged citizens of East Africa’s economic hub to keep up virus prevention measures, even as many Kenyans are wearyof a curfew they say is hurtingthe economy.

“This pandemic has inconvenie­nced our livelihood­s, but while we can recover this, we cannot get back lost lives,” Mr. Kenyatta said.

Kenyan authoritie­s also pushed back against vaccine skepticism, a growing concern after the local Catholic Doctors Associatio­n called on its 300 members to refuse the shots, calling them “totally unnecessar­y.” The group’s stance differs from that of the church itself.

“I can assure the safety of this vaccine as it has gone through a rigorous process,” said Patrick Amoth, the director general at the ministry of health and the first to receive a shot. “As you can see, I have taken it. No one should fear.”

The goal in Africa is that countries will be able to vaccinate 20% of their population with the COVAX doses by the end of this year — far fromthe goal of 60% or more to achieve so-called herd immunity, when enough people are protected through infection or vaccinatio­n to make it difficult for a virus tocontinue to spread.

“You expect that at this point we should be getting the initial 9 million doses from COVAX” instead of less than 1 million, said Misaki Wayengera, head of a technical committee advising Uganda’s response. He worries that delays in vaccine procuremen­t mean several months could pass before some people receive the second required shot.

Uganda aims to vaccinate 20% of its population with doses from COVAX, with 40% vaccinated via government and privatesec­tor funding.

The COVAX delays have pushed other countries to seek more doses elsewhere, including via bilateral deals thatcan be unfavorabl­e.

Uganda plans to buy 18 million doses of the AstraZenec­a vaccine from the Serum Institute of India, but the country faces cash shortages.

 ?? Ben Curtis/Associated Press ?? A Kenyan hospital security guard receives one of the country's first COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns Friday at Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi, Kenya. As many African nations got their first shipments of the vaccine Friday via the global COVAX program, officials noted that the millions of people there will need many more doses to arrive in the coming months.
Ben Curtis/Associated Press A Kenyan hospital security guard receives one of the country's first COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns Friday at Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi, Kenya. As many African nations got their first shipments of the vaccine Friday via the global COVAX program, officials noted that the millions of people there will need many more doses to arrive in the coming months.

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