India delivers COVID-19 shots to prepare for 'world's biggest
vaccination drive'
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[January 12, 2021]
By Aditi Shah and Sachin Ravikumar
NEW DELHI/BENGALURU (Reuters) - Indian
airlines started delivering batches of COVID-19 vaccines nationwide on
Tuesday, preparing for the launch of a campaign to offer shots to 1.3
billion people, in what officials call the world's biggest vaccination
drive.
Vaccinations are set to begin on Saturday in an effort that authorities
hope will see 300 million high-risk people inoculated over the next six
to eight months.
First to get the vaccine will be 30 million health and other frontline
workers, followed by about 270 million older than 50 or deemed
high-risk.
Airlines were due to deliver 5.65 million vaccine doses on Tuesday to
various cities, Aviation Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said on Twitter.
Officials in Prime Minister Narendra Modi's western home state of
Gujarat said vaccine distribution was their top priority.
"These vaccines will be taken to the cold storage from the airport and
swiftly delivered to vaccination booths," said Nitin Patel, the state's
deputy chief minister.
Modi's government signed purchase pacts on Monday with vaccine maker
Serum Institute of India (SII), based in the western city of Pune, for
its Covishield shot, more than a week after approving the vaccine
developed by Britain's AstraZeneca and Oxford University.
"We've given a special price of 200 rupees ($2.73) for the first 100
million doses only to the government of India on their request," Adar
Poonawalla, the firm's chief executive, told Reuters television's India
partner ANI.
The price represented a gesture of support for the common man, those who
are poor and vulnerable, and healthcare workers, he said, adding, "After
that we'll be selling it at 1,000 Indian rupees in private markets."
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Vehicles containing COVISHIELD, a coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
vaccine manufactured by Serum Institute of India, leave the airport
after a consignment of the vaccines arrived from the western city of
Pune for its distribution, in Ahmedabad, India, January 12, 2021.
REUTERS/Amit Dave
While AstraZeneca has said it would not profit from the vaccine
during the pandemic, neighbouring Bangladesh is expected to pay
about $4 a dose, and pricing in Britain is as yet unknown.
Health authorities in eastern and western states said they would
make use of experience gained from running regular child
immunisation programmes for polio to ensure full coverage in what
they called the world's biggest vaccination drive.
But creaking transport networks and a crumbling healthcare system
add an enormous layer of complexity, they said.
India's tally of close to 10.5 million infections is the world's
second highest after the United States, although the rate of
increase has been slowing.
On Tuesday, India added 12,584 cases, for its lowest daily increase
in several months, while the death toll exceeds 151,000.
(Additional reporting by Neha Arora, Krishna Das in New Delhi, Sumit
Khanna in Ahmedabad, Saurabh Sharma in Lucknow, Jatindra Dash in
Bhubaneshwar, Subrata Nagchoudhary in Kolkata; Writing by Rupam
Jain; Editing by Robert Birsel and Clarence Fernandez)
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