Covid-19: Covax opens new front in pandemic arms race

GENEVA— Covax aims to break the Covid-19 pandemic in 2022 by ensuring a steady supply of vaccines at last for the world’s poorest countries — and swiftly getting them into arms.

 

The global scheme, aimed at procuring donor-funded jabs for the 91 weakest economies, delivered its one billionth dose last weekend — a major milestone that came far later than anticipated after a year of setbacks.

 

The battle for Covax in 2021 was getting hold of doses — besides rich countries cornering most of the vaccine supply, it faced export bans from producer countries, regulatory red tape and manufacturing delays.

 

Rather than bulk-bought jabs, the scheme ended up relying on doses donated by wealthy nations, which too often were about to expire and couldn’t be used in time.

 

Covax sees the new front in 2022 as smoothing the supply chain — from a reliable stream off the production lines to efficient distribution set-ups in recipient countries.

 

The facility is co-led by the World Health Organization (WHO); the Gavi vaccine alliance, which handles procurement; and CEPI, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, which invests in prospective vaccines.

 

Covax this week called for $5.2 billion over the next three months to steady the ship this year.

 

“We can break the cycle of transmission and the pain and suffering,” Gavi chief Seth Berkley told the funding drive launch.

 

However, “what we do not have today are the resources to help countries adapt to the new challenges that we know Covid-19 will create in 2022”.

 

Covax therefore wants to build a pool of 600 million doses to ensure a reliable supply, and to cover eventual variables such as boosters or new variant-specific vaccines.

 

It also needs to support readiness and delivery in poorer nations, and cover the costs of syringes and transportation.

 

“I think we’ll still have rocky supply for the next six months or so and I’m a little worried, frankly, if there are new variant vaccines, that we might have an inequity 2.0,” said Berkley.

 

Covax reckons it has enough confirmed vaccine supplies to jab 45 percent of the population in the poorest 91 economies.

 

But the WHO wants 70 percent fully jabbed in every country by July to end the acute phase of the pandemic — a much bigger stretch, given how far behind many countries are, especially in Africa, where more than 85 percent of people are yet to receive a single dose.

 

At the current pace of vaccine roll-out, 109 countries will miss the mid-2022 target, the WHO has said.

 

Covax was launched in June 2020, when few would have imagined that several highly effective vaccines would emerge within nine months. Historically, the vast majority of potential vaccines fail.

 

The first Covax doses were administered in March 2021, “but then we hit barrier after barrier”, said Berkley.

 

“We were able to get this back on track — and now you’re seeing an accelerated drive towards getting vaccines out.”

 

The next billion doses is expected to take four to five months to deliver.

 

Of the billion doses delivered so far, around 285 million were AstraZeneca, 260 million Pfizer, 150 million Moderna, 125 million Janssen, 95 million Sinopharm and 85 million Sinovac.

 

Only WHO-approved vaccines can be used, of which there are eight so far. The latest is a major CEPI-funded vaccine, Novavax, which could do much of the heavy lifting in 2022.

 

CEPI chief executive Richard Hatchett said the target was now building capacity in poorer countries to roll out mass vaccination at speed.

 

“The last mile is going to be the major challenge for 2022,” he told a World Economic Forum session.

 

Up to 25 countries need particular help getting their vaccination programme in shape.

 

Overall, some 9.8 billion Covid-19 vaccine doses have been administered around the world. Covax jabs account for 82 percent of injections in the 91 poorest economies.

 

The top Covax donor-funded dose recipients so far are Bangladesh with 130 million, Indonesia 87 million, Pakistan 77 million and the Philippines 66 million.

 

Hatchett said that with the manufacturing capacity now available, helping poorer countries turn those doses into vaccinations could transform the course of the pandemic.

 

Whether primary vaccination or a booster, getting a jab to everyone who wants one “is an achievable goal in 2022”, he insisted.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

Record year for Argentine wine exports: foreign ministry

BUENOS AIRES— Argentina’s bottled wine exports hit a historic high in 2021 worth $817 million, the foreign ministry reported Saturday.

 

The previous high was the $786 million in foreign wine sales marked in 2012.

 

Leading export destinations were the United States, Britain, Brazil, Canada and the Netherlands, according to the report, based on a study by the Statistical Laboratory of the National Viticulture Institute (INV).

 

Comparing 2021 with international sales in 2020, there were also increases in shipments to the Mexico, China, France, Switzerland and Paraguay.

 

The Argentine global trade exchange in 2021 showed one of the largest surpluses of the last decade with almost $15 billion.

 

“Argentina achieved significant improvements in bottled wine exports, growing in volume and price,” said the ministry.

 

Among the varietals exported, Malbec, Cabernet Sauvignon and Chardonnay were high on the list.

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

US navy stops ship carrying ‘explosive precursor’ from Iran

MANAMA— The US navy said it had stopped a ship carrying 40 tons of a fertiliser that can be used to make explosives as it travelled from Iran along a route previously used to smuggle weapons to Yemen’s Houthi rebels.

 

The navy said it boarded and searched the ship, which last year was caught carrying thousands of weapons and handed to Yemen’s coast guard, after intercepting it in international waters in the Gulf of Oman on Tuesday.

 

A US guided-missile destroyer and patrol ship “interdicted the stateless vessel transiting from Iran… along a route historically used to traffic weapons to the Huthis in Yemen,” the Bahrain-based US 5th Fleet said.

 

“US forces discovered 40 tons (36,300 kilos) of urea fertiliser, a chemical compound with agricultural applications that is also known to be used as an explosive precursor,” it added.

 

The seizure comes at a time of high tensions in the region after a deadly drone-and-missile attack on Abu Dhabi by the Houthis prompted the Saudi-led coalition to launch air strikes on Yemen this week.

 

The pro-government coalition acknowledged strikes on Sanaa and Hodeida that killed at least 17, including children, and triggered an internet blackout across the impoverished country.

 

But it denied bombing a prison facility in Saada, the rebels’ northern heartland, which killed at least 70 and wounded more than 100 others.

 

The same “stateless fishing vessel” was found to be carrying thousands of AK47 assault rifles, rocket-propelled grenade launches and other weapons when it was stopped last February, the US Navy said.

 

The Saudi-led coalition and its allies, including the United States, regularly accuse Iran of providing military support to the Houthis, claims that Tehran denies.

 

 

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

TWO MEN AND ONE WOMAN ARRESTED FOR CONSPIRACY TO CHEAT

The Police have arrested two Singaporean men, aged 33 and 40, and a 46-year-old Singaporean woman, for conspiracy to cheat, for their alleged involvement in submitting false vaccination status to the Ministry of Health (MOH). A further eight persons are under investigation for their suspected involvement in this conspiracy.

On 21 January 2022, the Police received a report from MOH informing of their investigations into a registered medical practitioner for an offence under the Infectious Diseases (Antigen Rapid Test Providers) Regulations 2021, and suspected submission of false information to the National Immunisation Registry to indicate that he had administered COVID-19 vaccines to individuals when in fact he had not. The Police took immediate action to investigate the report and arrested the two men and one woman on the same day.

Preliminary investigations revealed that the two men, one of whom was the medical practitioner and the other, his assistant, had allegedly engaged in a conspiracy to cheat MOH by submitting the aforesaid false information with the intention to induce MOH to issue the Certificate of Vaccination against COVID-19 in the TraceTogether application. The 46-year-old woman, the founder of a group known as “Healing the Divide” (HTD), had allegedly referred clients, believed to be members of HTD, to the medical practitioner and had also suggested administering something in lieu of the vaccine to patients. The woman is also currently under investigation for an alleged offence of abetment by instigation of persons to obstruct public servants in the discharge of their public functions under Section 186, read with Section 117 of the Penal Code, for her alleged involvement in instigating others to call and overwhelm COVID-19 public hotlines.

The two men were each charged on 21 January 2022 with an offence of abetment by conspiracy to cheat under Section 417 read with Section 109 of the Penal Code 1871. The woman will be charged in court on 23 January 2022 with an offence of criminal conspiracy to cheat under Section 417 read with Section 120B of the Penal Code 1871. The two men have been remanded for further investigations.

The offences of abetment by conspiracy to cheat and criminal conspiracy to cheat are both punishable with imprisonment for a term of up to three years, or fine, or both.

The Police take a very serious view of conduct which may pose a public health risk amid the national fight against the COVID-19 pandemic. Offenders will be dealt with sternly, in accordance with the law.

 

Source: Singapore Police Force

APPEAL FOR INFORMATION – MR RAHMAT BIN ABDULLAH

The Police are appealing for information on the whereabouts of 73-year-old Mr Rahmat Bin Abdullah. Mr Rahmat was last seen in the vicinity of Block 437 Woodlands St 41 on 21 January 2022.

 

Anyone with information is requested to call the Police Hotline at 1800-255-0000 or submit information online at www.police.gov.sg/iwitness. All information will be kept strictly confidential.

 

 

Source: Singapore Police Force