South Asian nations turn to China, Russia for vaccine help

South Asian nations turn to China, Russia for vaccine help
Health workers inoculate local with a dose of the Covishield vaccine against the COVID-19 (coronavirus) at the KC General Hospital, in Bangalore. (File/AFP)
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Updated 09 June 2021
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South Asian nations turn to China, Russia for vaccine help

South Asian nations turn to China, Russia for vaccine help
  • Stock of AstraZeneca shots and Chinese Sinopharm jabs ran short in some South Asian countries

KATHMANDU: Sri Lanka began injecting pregnant women with a Chinese coronavirus vaccine on Wednesday and Nepal resumed inoculations with a China-made jab as India’s neighbors turn to Beijing and Moscow for help with supplies.
Nepal halted inoculations at the end of May after its stock of AstraZeneca shots and Chinese Sinopharm jabs ran short.
The program resumed on Tuesday after a million more Sinopharm doses arrived from China, the only country that has so far responded to its appeals for help.
India had previously supplied Nepal with the AstraZeneca vaccine from its manufacturer Serum Institute but in March froze vaccine exports as infections soared domestically.
“Nepal has sent requests to many countries including both neighbors, US, Russia and other countries but no additional vaccine has arrived yet,” health ministry official Samir Kumar Adhikari told AFP.
Barely two percent of the country’s people are fully vaccinated.
Around 1.3 million people received one AstraZeneca dose in March but have since been unable to get a second.
Sri Lanka meanwhile has been aggressively rolling out China’s Sinopharm jab after receiving two million doses in the past week.
On Wednesday the program was opened to pregnant women.
The island, in the middle of a ferocious third wave of infections, announced last month it was also buying 13 million Sputnik V vaccines from Russia.
The head of Sri Lanka’s Covid-19 response, army chief Shavendra Silva, said Wednesday that Colombo hopes to vaccinate the entire adult population by early next year.
The country has also asked Japan for 600,000 AstraZeneca jabs so it can offer a second dose to people who received a first shot, the president’s office said Wednesday.
Elsewhere in the region, Bangladesh has been giving only second doses of the AstraZeneca shot since late April as supplies dwindle.
Health minister Zahid Maleque last month said the country wants to buy 50 million doses from Sinopharm.
It also wants to buy five million Sputnik doses, foreign minister A.K. Abdul Momen said this week after meeting the Russian ambassador.
Momen said his country has sought two million AstraZeneca doses from the United States, which has announced it plans to export 80 million vaccine doses around the world.
A Pfizer consignment also reached Dhaka last week under the Covax initiative, a program backed by the World Health Organization to distribute vaccines to poorer nations.
India has not said when exports might resume. On Tuesday it said it had ordered 440 million doses from Serum and local producer Bharat Biotech for use in India.
It has also made an advance order for 300 million doses of a vaccine — yet to be approved — made by Hyderabad-based Biological E.