Africa to start receiving 400 million J&J COVID-19 vaccine doses next
week
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[July 22, 2021]
NAIROBI (Reuters) -Africa, battling a
severe third wave of COVID-19 infections, will start to receive the
first batch of 400 million doses of vaccines from Johnson & Johnson next
week, the African Union's special envoy on COVID said on Thursday.
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Only about 60 million doses have been administered among a total
population of 1.3 billion so far on the 55-nation continent.
J&J doses will be used to immunise half of the estimated 800 million
people in need of the vaccine on the continent, Strive Masiyiwa, who
is also coordinator of the AU task force on vaccine acquisition,
told an online news conference.
Around 6 million doses will be delivered to 27 nations that have
paid their share through the end of August, Masiyiwa said, with
another 18 finalising loans from the World Bank and other global
lenders before they make payment.
Deliveries will rise to an average of 10 million a month from
September, increasing to 20 million in January until the order is
fulfilled by September next year, he added.
The balance of the vaccine requirements for the continent will come
from COVAX, the global vaccine-sharing scheme for poorer nations, as
well as bilateral donations from developed nations like the United
States, Masiyiwa said.
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J&J, whose vaccine is
administered through a single shot, will ship
the doses from a facility in South Africa
through its partnership with Aspen Pharmacare,
the special envoy said.
Masiyiwa called on pharmaceutical companies to
produce vaccines in Africa under licensing
arrangements, not under contract manufacturing,
which critics say prevents countries having
vaccine independence.
"We want to be treated the same way as they
produce in India," he said.
(Reporting by Duncan MiririEditing by Mark
Heinrich)
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