Mexico has signed memorandums of understanding with Johnson &
Johnson, along with Chinese companies CanSino Biologics Inc and
Walvax Biotechnology Co Ltd, Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard said at
a news conference.
Ebrard said trials would start between September and January,
depending on approval from Mexico's food and drug agency.
He said the goal was to secure access to the drugs for Mexico,
highlighting growing anxiety and "vaccine diplomacy" around the
world as developing countries jostle to get timely access to
treatments and vaccines.
"This is what worries President (Andres Manuel) Lopez Obrador, that
we have it on time," Ebrard said.

The foreign ministry said CanSino and Walvax were interested in
producing an eventual vaccine in Mexico for delivery to the Latin
American market.
More than 150 vaccines are being developed and tested around the
world to stop the COVID-19 pandemic, with 25 in human clinical
trials, according to the World Health Organization.
Russia is the first country to approve a COVID-19 vaccine, which it
named "Sputnik V" for foreign markets, an official said on Tuesday.
Mexico's coronavirus czar, Deputy Health Minister Hugo Lopez-Gatell,
told a news conference he was surprised by the Russian news, and
that the government would wait for more information before making
any decisions on the vaccine.
Mexico has already lobbied in world forums, including at the G20
group of nations and the United Nations, to secure equitable access
for an eventual vaccine.
Several other emerging markets in Asia and the Middle East have
followed a similar strategy, consultancy Oxford Business Group
highlighted in a report on Tuesday.
[to top of second column] |

Large-scale, phase-three human testing for the J&J unit Janssen Pharmaceuticals'
candidate could start in the second half of September, the company has
previously said.
J&J could produce 1 billion doses of the vaccine next year if it proves
successful and would consider injecting healthy volunteers with the novel
coronavirus if there are not enough patients for final trials, a company
executive told Reuters on Tuesday.
J&J is likely to conduct those trials in the United States and Latin America,
the regions of the world with the highest number of cases currently.
The company started early U.S. human safety trials in July after releasing
details of a study in monkeys that showed its best-performing vaccine candidate
offered strong protection in a single dose.
Walvax's experimental vaccine is currently under early testing at a Chinese
military research institute.
CanSino Biologics' vaccine candidate is already in clinical trials. The company
is also collaborating with Canada's National Research Council to "pave the way"
for future trials in Canada, the research council said in May.

Latin America's second-largest economy has suffered nearly 54,000 deaths from
COVID-19, according to official data, the third-highest toll in the world.
(Reporting by Frank Jack Daniel; Editing by Alistair Bell, Stephen Coates and
Sonya Hepinstall)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |