Nepal kicks off coronavirus inoculations with Indian vaccine
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[January 27, 2021]
By Gopal Sharma
KATHMANDU (Reuters) - The Himalayan nation
of Nepal launched its largest immunisation campaign on Wednesday with
its first coronavirus vaccinations for medical workers, following a gift
of one million doses from giant neighbour India.
Wearing a traditional black peaked cap and sleeveless red vest, a doctor
at a teaching hospital in the capital, Kathmandu, became the first
recipient of a dose taken from a bed of ice in a cubical blue cooler and
injected by masked and gowned staff.
"We have a new weapon now and I hope we will be able to defeat the
coronavirus soon," said Dinesh Kafle, 50, after he was applauded by
those queuing for their turn while he sat in a white-walled room before
a poster advertising the campaign.
Tens of thousands of Nepal's frontline health workers are set to receive
India's AstraZeneca vaccine, caretaker Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli
said as the drive began.
"We are in talks with India to procure more vaccines at a proper price,"
added Oli, who is wooing popular support at a time when he is seeking
early elections.
This month, India said it would give millions of vaccine doses to its
South Asian neighbours, drawing their praise in what could prove a
pushback against China's acitivities in the region.
Authorities say China, which had promised to help Nepal deal with the
pandemic, has yet to get clearance for its Sinopharm shots.
In recent years the mainly Hindu nation wedged between China and India
has become a playground for competition over diplomatic and strategic
influence between the Asian giants.
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Health workers prepare to start vaccination against the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) in Kathmandu, Nepal January 27, 2021. REUTERS/Navesh
Chitrakar
For years India has struggled to match the pace of Chinese
investment in Nepal and the Indian Ocean countries of the Maldives
and Sri Lanka, where China is building ports, roads and power
stations in its Belt and Road Initiative.
But the demand for vaccines in these countries, desperate to revive
their tourism-dependent economies, has offered Prime Minister
Narendra Modi's government a way to claw back ground, diplomats have
said.
"We have been able to begin our vaccination drive within a week
after India began," said Oli, recently thrown out of the ruling
Communist party by opponents over his abrupt December decision to
dissolve parliament and seek an early election.
With a population of more than 30 million, Nepal's tally of
infections stands at 270,092, with 2,017 deaths.
(Reporting by Gopal Sharma; Editing by Rupam Jain and Clarence
Fernandez)
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