Poor countries seen missing out as rich nations hoard Covid-19 vaccines

Poor countries seen missing out as rich nations hoard Covid-19 vaccines

by Joseph Anthony
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Nine out of 10 people in dozens of poor nations could miss out on getting vaccinated against COVID-19 next year because rich countries have hoarded far more doses than they need, campaigners said on Wednesday.

Rich nations home to 14% of the global population had bought 53% of the total stock of the most-promising vaccines as of last month, said the Peopleโ€™s Vaccine Alliance, a coalition including Oxfam, Amnesty International and Global Justice Now.


They said pharmaceutical companies working on COVID-19 vaccines should openly share their technology and intellectual property through the World Health Organisation (WHO) so more doses can be manufactured.
โ€œThis shouldnโ€™t be a battle between countries to secure enough doses,โ€ Mohga Kamal-Yanni, an advisor for Peopleโ€™s Vaccine Alliance, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
โ€œDuring these unprecedented times of a global pandemic, peopleโ€™s lives and livelihoods should be put before pharmaceutical company profit,โ€ she added.
While high-risk groups in Britain received on Tuesday the first shot of the vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech, most people in 67 low- and lower middle-income countries including Bhutan, Ethiopia and Haiti, risk being left behind, they said.
Among the three COVID-19 vaccines for which efficacy results have been announced, almost all the available doses of two of them โ€“ Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech โ€“ have been acquired by rich countries, the Alliance report said.
While AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford have pledged to provide 64% of their doses to people in developing nations, that would only reach 18% of the worldโ€™s population by next year โ€œat mostโ€, it added.
The campaigners used data from science information and analytics company Airfinity to analyse the deals done between countries and eight leading vaccine candidates, including Chinaโ€™s Sinovac and Russiaโ€™s Sputnik V.
The EU, United States, Britain, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, Australia, Hong Kong, Macau, New Zealand, Israel and Kuwait have acquired 53% of these potential doses โ€“ with Canada buying enough to vaccinate its population five times over, Oxfam said.
โ€œBy buying up the vast majority of the worldโ€™s vaccine supply, rich countries are in breach of their human rights obligations,โ€ Steve Cockburn, Amnesty Internationalโ€™s Head of Economic and Social Justice, said in a statement.
REUTERS

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