BFF-26 Iraq receives first Covid vaccines, gift from China

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BFF-26

VIRUS-HEALTH-IRAQ-CHINA-VACCINE

Iraq receives first Covid vaccines, gift from China

BAGHDAD, March 2, 2021 (BSS/AFP) – Iraq on Tuesday received 50,000
Sinopharm vaccines donated by China, the health ministry announced, launching
a long-awaited vaccination campaign.

Health ministry spokesman Seif al-Badr told reporters that the first
delivery in the early hours meant inoculations could begin.

“The doses will be delivered to Baghdad’s three main hospitals, and maybe
to some provinces,” said Badr, who confirmed the jabs were donations.

“We will start vaccinations today, Tuesday,” he said.

The health ministry simultaneously announced it had agreed with the
Chinese ambassador in Baghdad to purchase another two million doses, with no
details on payment or timing.

Sinopharm affiliate Wuhan Institute Of Biological Products says its
vaccine has an efficacy rate of 72.51 percent, behind rival jabs by Pfizer-
BioNTech and Moderna, which have 95 percent and 94.5 percent rates
respectively.

Hours earlier, on Monday afternoon, the health ministry launched an online
platform for citizens to register for vaccinations, but it had not said the
campaign would begin the next day and the page was not functional on Tuesday.

It has said health workers, security forces and the elderly would be
prioritised and that the vaccine would be administered free of charge, but
has given few other details.

The first jabs arrived as the Iraqi government faces growing criticism of
its handling of the pandemic.

The country has been hit by a second wave of Covid-19 infections, with
more than 3,000 new cases reported daily, a few months after they had dropped
to around 700 a day, and deaths also tripling to around 25 a day in recent
weeks.

To stop the spread, Iraq has imposed overnight curfews during weekdays and
full lockdowns on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, with obligatory mask-
wearing in public. But there is little commitment by either the public or
security forces deployed to enforce the measures, in a country whose health
sector has been ravaged by decades of war, corruption and slim investment.

Some Iraqi officials have already been vaccinated.

Two current and one former Iraqi official told AFP in January they had
already received doses of “the Chinese vaccine”.

They said 1,000 vaccine doses had been gifted to a senior Iraqi politician
through contacts in China and had been distributed to top politicians and
government officials.

BSS/AFP/MSY/1343 hrs