South Africa to get coronavirus vaccines in February
South Africa says it will get COVID-19 vaccines by next month amid talks with pharmaceutical companies as no deal has been signed.
Health Minister Zweli Mkhize who disclosed this, said talks on vaccines are on going.
The country is battling a resurgence in coronavirus infections driven partly by a new variant called 501.V2. It has recorded more than 1 million infections, the most on the African continent, and more than 29,000 deaths.
In an opinion piece published in major local news outlets, a group of prominent health experts criticised the government for moving too slowly to procure sufficient vaccines.
Africa’s most industrialised nation is participating in the COVAX vaccine distribution initiative co-led by the World Health Organization however, the scheme could only cover 10% of its population of roughly 60 million people.
That has caused anxiety among some scientists and academics, who have urged the government to reach agreements with pharmaceutical companies quickly given that other countries have already started vaccinating.
Mkhize said at a news conference that officials were doing everything possible to obtain vaccines before the COVAX doses become available.
“We are targeting February, although all of that will depend very much on the success of the current bilateral negotiations,” he said.
Mkhize said the ultimate aim was to vaccinate a minimum of 67% of the population to reach herd immunity.
The government has had discussions with vaccine manufacturers including Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson, as well as with ones in Russia and China, a health ministry presentation showed.
The presentation said negotiations had progressed well and the government was fairly confident of having supply in the first quarter.
Mkhize said officials were considering three mechanisms to fund vaccine procurement: government financing, medical aids and a private sector contribution.
New daily cases have hit a record 18,000 in recent days.