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Zimbabwe gets first batch of Sinopharm jabs from China
by AFP Staff Writers
Harare (AFP) Feb 15, 2021

Zimbabwe on Monday received its first batch of Sinopharm Covid-19 vaccine doses from China as the country, already struggling with a deepening economic crisis and scant health resources, geared up to begin inoculations.

Wrapped in white tarpaulin, the shipment of 200,000 doses, a donation from the Chinese government, arrived early Monday aboard the country's only working aircraft -- an Air Zimbabwe Boeing 767.

The aircraft was often used by the late former ruler Robert Mugabe to travel abroad for medical treatment or routine check-ups.

Receiving the vaccines at Robert Mugabe International Airport, Vice President Constantino Chiwenga said "it has not been lost on us that in times of need, China's response has been swift."

Chiwenga said the donation was "timely" and "yet another demonstration of the long bond of friendship and solidarity."

Zimbabwe is the first country in southern Africa to receive the Sinopharm vaccine, whose efficacy against a new variant that emerged in neighbouring South Africa is still unclear.

The vaccines will undergo routine checks by the local medicines control authority before they start to be administered this week.

Zimbabwe has already ordered another 600,000 doses from China expected to be delivered in early March.

In all the country plans to procure a total of 1.8 million doses of the Sinopharm formula -- which is 79 percent effective, according to its developers.

The Sinopharm vaccine also been administered in Egypt and the Indian Ocean archipelago of the Seychelles.

Last week Equatorial Guinea took delivery of 100,000 Sinopharm doses donated by China, while Senegal said at the weekend it was in talks to acquire 200,000 doses.

As of Sunday, Zimbabwe had recorded 35,172 Covid-19 infections, including 1,400 deaths.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa on Monday prolonged a lockdown he imposed last month by a further two weeks.

"The numbers of active cases and deaths are...still very high," Mnangangwa said in a televised address, adding the lockdown extension would allow the "number of active cases and those still in incubation to recede".

He also reduced the country's curfew by three hours -- it will now be imposed from 8pm (1800 GMT) to 5am (0300 GMT), after previously running from 6pm to 6am.

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BOEING


Related Links
Epidemics on Earth - Bird Flu, HIV/AIDS, Ebola


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WHO expert slams US pandemic intel as curbs tightened in Europe
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A WHO expert sent to China to probe the coronavirus hit out at US intelligence on Covid-19 as his team headed home with few answers about the origin of a pandemic that was forcing more clampdowns in some of the hardest-hit parts of the world. German Chancellor Angela Merkel was set to seek an extension of strict virus curbs, as the European Commission chief addressed the stumbling vaccination rollout on the continent - which accounts for a third of the 2.3 million Covid-19 deaths worldwide. The ... read more

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