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CHINESE VACCINE FOR THE WORLD

Dont know mate, just got back after burying 7th family member today who died of covid yesterday night. It is beyond my mind right now what the future holds. All I know is these communists need to be hung by their nuts for letting this pandemic out of the box. These wumao brigade on this forum is chastising holier than though ... - just give me a handful of these commie keyboard bots in person and they will flipping find out. they need to be buried under the garbage they come from.
I'm really sorry to hear about ur loss , there is one positive thing this pandemic has done is bring us altogether to fight against it regardless of race , religion etcif I rem right ur from israel which has the most people inoculated with covid vaccine , why are ppl still dying there ?
 
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Dont know mate, just got back after burying 7th family member today who died of covid yesterday night. It is beyond my mind right now what the future holds. All I know is these communists need to be hung by their nuts for letting this pandemic out of the box. These wumao brigade on this forum is chastising holier than though ... - just give me a handful of these commie keyboard bots in person and they will flipping find out. they need to be buried under the garbage they come from.
May God give patience to you and have mercy on what you have lost. There is in my family too, who passed away due to covid. We are going towards to more tough times and your idea seems very motivating to staying strong.
 
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I'm really sorry to hear about ur loss , there is one positive thing this pandemic has done is bring us altogether to fight against it regardless of race , religion etcif I rem right ur from israel which has the most people inoculated with covid vaccine , why are ppl still dying there ?
simple - look at the demographics - it is an apartheid state. You will find most will be those who are not classified as 1st tier of citizens.
May God give patience to you and have mercy on what you have lost. There is in my family too, who passed away due to covid. We are going towards to more tough times and your idea seems very motivating to staying strong.
thanks. patience is no longer there; putting people to be buried is hitting us pretty hard. Just learnt another cousin contracted covid at her pharmacy. one worker tested positive. She is ok but we cannot rule out anything.
 
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Oh boy.... once the phony China friendly mask displayed in Sinodefence forum is off. There is nothing but pure naked hatred of the Chinese people way worse than even Indians beneath that facade for all see.

It must be tough on you to hold your hate inside for so many years there. 👍

99% of Pakistanis love the Chinese he is a statistical anomaly, perhaps he has his reasons please ignore.
 
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99% of Pakistanis love the Chinese he is a statistical anomaly, perhaps he has his reasons please ignore.

I understand most Pakistani members are China friendly here. And you have pro-American group, pro-SA group, pro-Turkey group. pro-Iran group etc..

I was just replying specifically to this member who I remember from another forum that used to be decent and always seem China friendly poster there. The change and hatred against Chinese people here was dramatic and pure evil. He didn't even bother using cover like I hate CCP or Chinese troll only etc....
 
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I understand most Pakistani members are China friendly here. And you have pro-American group, pro-SA group, pro-Turkey group. pro-Iran group etc..

I was just replying specifically to this member who I remember from another forum that used to be decent and always seem China friendly poster there. The change and hatred against Chinese people here was dramatic and pure evil. He didn't even bother using cover like I hate CCP or Chinese troll only etc....

I don't know his story so I have no idea why he turned from friend to foe. It doesn't matter, it's not like he has any influence on Pakistan's foreign policy. May be it's COVID related misplaced anger may be something else, probably best addressed outside this thread via other avenues.
 
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I read this in The New York Times

It’s Time to Trust China’s and Russia’s Vaccines
They, too, work, and they can help fill shortages everywhere.

By Achal Prabhala and Chee Yoke Ling
Mr. Prabhala is an Indian public health activist promoting wider distribution of Covid-19 vaccines. Ms. Chee, a Malaysian public interest lawyer, worked for a decade on improving access to medicines in China.
  • Feb. 5, 2021
A medic inoculating a doctor with Russia’s Covid-19 vaccine, Sputnik V, at a policlinic in Moscow in early December. The leading medical journal The Lancet published this week trial results showing that Sputnik V had an efficacy rate of 91.6 percent.

A medic inoculating a doctor with Russia’s Covid-19 vaccine, Sputnik V, at a policlinic in Moscow in early December. The leading medical journal The Lancet published this week trial results showing that Sputnik V had an efficacy rate of 91.6 percent.Credit...Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times
While the richest countries in the world are grappling with shortages of Covid-19 vaccines, some of the poorest worry about getting vaccines at all. Yet a solution to both problems may be hiding in plain sight: vaccines from China and Russia, and soon, perhaps, India.

Chinese and Russian vaccines were initially dismissed in Western and other global media, partly because of a perception that they were inferior to the vaccines produced by Moderna, Pfizer-BioNtech or AstraZeneca. And that perception seemed to stem partly from the fact that China and Russia are authoritarian states.
But evidence has been accumulating for a while that the vaccines from those countries work well, too. The leading medical journal The Lancet published this week interim results from late-stage trials showing that Sputnik V, the Russian vaccine, had an efficacy rate of 91.6 percent. Those confirmed findings released in mid-December by the vaccine’s developers, the Gamaleya Center and the Russian Direct Investment Fund.
The United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Iraq, Serbia, Morocco, Hungary and Pakistan have approved the Sinopharm vaccine from China; as of mid-January, 1.8 million people in the U.A.E. had received it. Bolivia, Indonesia, Turkey, Brazil and Chile have approved and begun to roll out another Chinese vaccine, from Sinovac. Sputnik V will be distributed in more than a dozen countries in Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Latin America

When those countries vetted these vaccines, they made informed decisions, based on evidence about safety and efficacy released by the Chinese and Russian manufacturers — much of it also published in peer-reviewed scientific journals like The Lancet and JAMA — or after running independent trials of their own. To assume otherwise is to doubt the ability or integrity of these governments, some of which have health regulatory systems on par with those in the United States or Europe.

In the face of major vaccine shortages and delivery delays, France, Spain and Germany are now beginning to talk about possibly placing orders for the Chinese and Russian vaccines. Semi-desperation, it seems, has finally prompted them to call out “prejudice” against non-Western vaccines.

But the skepticism endures. There is suspicion of the Russian vaccine in Iran, of the Chinese vaccines in Pakistan, and of both in Kenya and South Africa. A recent YouGov poll asked 19,000 people in 17 countries if they thought “more positively or negatively” about vaccines developed in which of those countries: Russia, China and India ranked lowest (except for Iran).

To some extent this is understandable. China’s and Russia’s self-serving propaganda campaigns touting their respective vaccines only increased wariness, especially abroad.

China and Russia also started inoculating some of their citizens last year without efficacy results from late-stage, or Phase 3, clinical trials. (The Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines were approved in the United States after interim results from Phase 3 trials.) India has done the same recently with Covaxin, a vaccine developed by Bharat Biotech, causing a national furor.

All three governments have defended these actions as emergency measures necessary to accelerate the production and distribution of vaccines. That explanation may seem inadequate to some, but doing this is legal, and regulators in the West also cut corners for the same reason (though with more transparency).

And now there are significant data about the reliability of the Chinese and Russian vaccines. (It’s still too early to tell for Covaxin.) Trial results in the U.A.E. in early December placed the efficacy of the Sinopharm vaccine at 86 percent; others, in China, at 79 percent.

A note, too, about what these efficacy numbers really measure and mean. Confusion over that has created doubts about vaccines — though about some vaccines more than others.


Take Sinovac’s, and what appear to be conflicting results about its performance: 91 percent efficacy in trials in Turkey, 65 percent in trials in Indonesia and 50.4 percent in trials in Brazil. That last finding promptly made international headlines, even though researchers at the Butantan Institute, the state-run center in São Paulo that conducted those trials, pointed out at the same time that the vaccine had scored a 78 percent efficacy rate in preventing mild-to-severe cases of Covid-19.


We talked to Ricardo Palacios, the clinical research medical director at the Butantan Institute, in late January, and he told us that the trials had deliberately been designed as a “stress test.” They were conducted exclusively among “health care workers directly taking care of Covid-19 patients,” he said. (The Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccine trials included some health care workers and other individuals at high risk, but not just.) And when you study a pool of subjects with much greater exposure to infection, a vaccine is likely to appear to perform less well. The Butantan Institute’s trials also defined what counted as a symptom of Covid-19 much more broadly than did other trials.

The protocols for trials vary, in other words, even for the same vaccine. Considering that, now imagine the potential for differences among results from trials for various vaccines — differences that may reveal as much about the trials’s designs as the vaccines’ performance.

Image
A Chinese health care worker giving a Covid-19 vaccine in Beijing. Confusion about what “efficacy” trials really measure and mean has created doubt about vaccines — and about some vaccines more than others.

A Chinese health care worker giving a Covid-19 vaccine in Beijing. Confusion about what “efficacy” trials really measure and mean has created doubt about vaccines — and about some vaccines more than others.Credit...Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

No doubt, more information about the Chinese and Russian vaccines must be released to the public, but the same still goes to some extent for the leading Western vaccines. Not all the details or raw data for trials of the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines have been made available, not even to researchers.

The fact is that no Covid-19 vaccine has been developed or released as transparently as it should have been. And while China and Russia may have botched their rollouts more than some Western companies, that doesn’t necessarily mean their vaccines are shoddy.

The mounting evidence showing that the Chinese and Russian vaccines are reliable should be taken seriously, and fast, especially considering supply issues throughout the world.

Most vaccines produced in the West have already been bought up by rich countries: as of early December, all of Moderna’s vaccines and 96 percent of Pfizer-BioNTech’s, according to the People’s Vaccine Alliance, a coalition of organizations calling for wider and fairer access to vaccines worldwide.

Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance has some Western vaccines reserved. But by our tally of its supply data, as of this week, it estimated being able to ship during the first quarter of this year only between 110 million and 122 million doses from AstraZeneca and a mere 1.2 million doses from Pfizer-BioNTech — for all 145 of the countries that have signed up with Gavi to obtain Covid-19 vaccines.

What’s more, most big pharmaceutical companies in the West have resisted licensing their vaccines to non-Western manufacturers, and several wealthy countries are blocking a proposal by India and South Africa that the World Trade Organization temporarily suspend some intellectual property protections for Covid-19-related vaccines and treatments.

On the other hand, according to our latest analysis of data provided by the analytics firm Airfinity, Sinovac has already signed deals to export this year more than 350 million doses of its vaccine to 12 countries; Sinopharm, around 194 million doses to 11 countries; Sputnik V, about 400 million doses to 17 countries. All three manufacturers have stated publicly that they will have the capacity to produce up to 1 billion doses each in 2021. And all three have licensed their vaccines to local manufacturers in several countries.

So how can these vaccines be made desirable to more of the people who need them? One way would be to subject them to a formal assessment by an international organization with technical expertise. The problem currently is that the World Health Organization’s rules for certifying vaccines are themselves skewed in favor of rich, essentially Western, states.

The W.H.O. maintains a list of “stringent regulatory authorities” it trusts for quality control — all are European countries except for Australia, Canada, Japan and the United States. For the rest of the world, the W.H.O. runs a service called prequalification. In theory, this is a way by which vaccines from, say, China or Russia could be placed on an equal footing with vaccines from the West. In reality, it’s an onerous and time-consuming process.

When a vaccine is developed in and approved by a country on the W.H.O.’s trusted list, the organization usually relies on that assessment to quickly sign off. But when a vaccine maker anywhere else applies for prequalification, the W.H.O. conducts a full evaluation from scratch, including a physical inspection of the manufacturing facilities.

The W.H.O. approved the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine at the end of 2020 less than two months after the makers applied for consideration, and it is expected to decide on the Moderna and AstraZeneca vaccines this month. The Chinese and Russian vaccines are still waiting in line, even though the review processes for those were initiated earlier.

In the course of reviewing the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, the W.H.O. worked closely with the European Medicines Agency, and approved it about 10 days after the E.M.A. had. There is no reason the W.H.O., while maintaining its standards, couldn’t also collaborate with health regulators in other countries to help local vaccine manufacturers get through the vetting process. It must urgently give all vaccine-producing countries the attention they deserve.

Some doctors and activists have put forward proposals to increase the delivery worldwide of vaccines produced in the West. These calls are well-intentioned, but they, too, assume that vaccines from Western countries are the only ones worth having — and waiting for.

There is a simpler solution, already at hand: It’s time to start trusting other countries’ vaccines.

Achal Prabhala is the coordinator of the AccessIBSA project, which campaigns for access to medicines, and a fellow of the Shuttleworth Foundation. Chee Yoke Ling is the executive director of Third World Network, an international policy research and advocacy organization headquartered in Penang, Malaysia.
 
Last edited:
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It’s Time to Trust China’s and Russia’s Vaccines
They, too, work, and they can help fill shortages everywhere.

By Achal Prabhala and Chee Yoke Ling
Mr. Prabhala is an Indian public health activist promoting wider distribution of Covid-19 vaccines. Ms. Chee, a Malaysian public interest lawyer, worked for a decade on improving access to medicines in China.
  • Feb. 5, 2021
A medic inoculating a doctor with Russia’s Covid-19 vaccine, Sputnik V, at a policlinic in Moscow in early December. The leading medical journal The Lancet published this week trial results showing that Sputnik V had an efficacy rate of 91.6 percent.

A medic inoculating a doctor with Russia’s Covid-19 vaccine, Sputnik V, at a policlinic in Moscow in early December. The leading medical journal The Lancet published this week trial results showing that Sputnik V had an efficacy rate of 91.6 percent.Credit...Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times
While the richest countries in the world are grappling with shortages of Covid-19 vaccines, some of the poorest worry about getting vaccines at all. Yet a solution to both problems may be hiding in plain sight: vaccines from China and Russia, and soon, perhaps, India.

Chinese and Russian vaccines were initially dismissed in Western and other global media, partly because of a perception that they were inferior to the vaccines produced by Moderna, Pfizer-BioNtech or AstraZeneca. And that perception seemed to stem partly from the fact that China and Russia are authoritarian states.
But evidence has been accumulating for a while that the vaccines from those countries work well, too. The leading medical journal The Lancet published this week interim results from late-stage trials showing that Sputnik V, the Russian vaccine, had an efficacy rate of 91.6 percent. Those confirmed findings released in mid-December by the vaccine’s developers, the Gamaleya Center and the Russian Direct Investment Fund.
The United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Iraq, Serbia, Morocco, Hungary and Pakistan have approved the Sinopharm vaccine from China; as of mid-January, 1.8 million people in the U.A.E. had received it. Bolivia, Indonesia, Turkey, Brazil and Chile have approved and begun to roll out another Chinese vaccine, from Sinovac. Sputnik V will be distributed in more than a dozen countries in Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Latin America

When those countries vetted these vaccines, they made informed decisions, based on evidence about safety and efficacy released by the Chinese and Russian manufacturers — much of it also published in peer-reviewed scientific journals like The Lancet and JAMA — or after running independent trials of their own. To assume otherwise is to doubt the ability or integrity of these governments, some of which have health regulatory systems on par with those in the United States or Europe.

In the face of major vaccine shortages and delivery delays, France, Spain and Germany are now beginning to talk about possibly placing orders for the Chinese and Russian vaccines. Semi-desperation, it seems, has finally prompted them to call out “prejudice” against non-Western vaccines.

But the skepticism endures. There is suspicion of the Russian vaccine in Iran, of the Chinese vaccines in Pakistan, and of both in Kenya and South Africa. A recent YouGov poll asked 19,000 people in 17 countries if they thought “more positively or negatively” about vaccines developed in which of those countries: Russia, China and India ranked lowest (except for Iran).

To some extent this is understandable. China’s and Russia’s self-serving propaganda campaigns touting their respective vaccines only increased wariness, especially abroad.

China and Russia also started inoculating some of their citizens last year without efficacy results from late-stage, or Phase 3, clinical trials. (The Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines were approved in the United States after interim results from Phase 3 trials.) India has done the same recently with Covaxin, a vaccine developed by Bharat Biotech, causing a national furor.

All three governments have defended these actions as emergency measures necessary to accelerate the production and distribution of vaccines. That explanation may seem inadequate to some, but doing this is legal, and regulators in the West also cut corners for the same reason (though with more transparency).

And now there are significant data about the reliability of the Chinese and Russian vaccines. (It’s still too early to tell for Covaxin.) Trial results in the U.A.E. in early December placed the efficacy of the Sinopharm vaccine at 86 percent; others, in China, at 79 percent.

A note, too, about what these efficacy numbers really measure and mean. Confusion over that has created doubts about vaccines — though about some vaccines more than others.


Take Sinovac’s, and what appear to be conflicting results about its performance: 91 percent efficacy in trials in Turkey, 65 percent in trials in Indonesia and 50.4 percent in trials in Brazil. That last finding promptly made international headlines, even though researchers at the Butantan Institute, the state-run center in São Paulo that conducted those trials, pointed out at the same time that the vaccine had scored a 78 percent efficacy rate in preventing mild-to-severe cases of Covid-19.

We talked to Ricardo Palacios, the clinical research medical director at the Butantan Institute, in late January, and he told us that the trials had deliberately been designed as a “stress test.” They were conducted exclusively among “health care workers directly taking care of Covid-19 patients,” he said. (The Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccine trials included some health care workers and other individuals at high risk, but not just.) And when you study a pool of subjects with much greater exposure to infection, a vaccine is likely to appear to perform less well. The Butantan Institute’s trials also defined what counted as a symptom of Covid-19 much more broadly than did other trials.

The protocols for trials vary, in other words, even for the same vaccine. Considering that, now imagine the potential for differences among results from trials for various vaccines — differences that may reveal as much about the trials’s designs as the vaccines’ performance.

Image
A Chinese health care worker giving a Covid-19 vaccine in Beijing. Confusion about what “efficacy” trials really measure and mean has created doubt about vaccines — and about some vaccines more than others.

A Chinese health care worker giving a Covid-19 vaccine in Beijing. Confusion about what “efficacy” trials really measure and mean has created doubt about vaccines — and about some vaccines more than others.Credit...Kevin Frayer/Getty Images

No doubt, more information about the Chinese and Russian vaccines must be released to the public, but the same still goes to some extent for the leading Western vaccines. Not all the details or raw data for trials of the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines have been made available, not even to researchers.

The fact is that no Covid-19 vaccine has been developed or released as transparently as it should have been. And while China and Russia may have botched their rollouts more than some Western companies, that doesn’t necessarily mean their vaccines are shoddy.

The mounting evidence showing that the Chinese and Russian vaccines are reliable should be taken seriously, and fast, especially considering supply issues throughout the world.

Most vaccines produced in the West have already been bought up by rich countries: as of early December, all of Moderna’s vaccines and 96 percent of Pfizer-BioNTech’s, according to the People’s Vaccine Alliance, a coalition of organizations calling for wider and fairer access to vaccines worldwide.

Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance has some Western vaccines reserved. But by our tally of its supply data, as of this week, it estimated being able to ship during the first quarter of this year only between 110 million and 122 million doses from AstraZeneca and a mere 1.2 million doses from Pfizer-BioNTech — for all 145 of the countries that have signed up with Gavi to obtain Covid-19 vaccines.

What’s more, most big pharmaceutical companies in the West have resisted licensing their vaccines to non-Western manufacturers, and several wealthy countries are blocking a proposal by India and South Africa that the World Trade Organization temporarily suspend some intellectual property protections for Covid-19-related vaccines and treatments.

On the other hand, according to our latest analysis of data provided by the analytics firm Airfinity, Sinovac has already signed deals to export this year more than 350 million doses of its vaccine to 12 countries; Sinopharm, around 194 million doses to 11 countries; Sputnik V, about 400 million doses to 17 countries. All three manufacturers have stated publicly that they will have the capacity to produce up to 1 billion doses each in 2021. And all three have licensed their vaccines to local manufacturers in several countries.

So how can these vaccines be made desirable to more of the people who need them? One way would be to subject them to a formal assessment by an international organization with technical expertise. The problem currently is that the World Health Organization’s rules for certifying vaccines are themselves skewed in favor of rich, essentially Western, states.

The W.H.O. maintains a list of “stringent regulatory authorities” it trusts for quality control — all are European countries except for Australia, Canada, Japan and the United States. For the rest of the world, the W.H.O. runs a service called prequalification. In theory, this is a way by which vaccines from, say, China or Russia could be placed on an equal footing with vaccines from the West. In reality, it’s an onerous and time-consuming process.

When a vaccine is developed in and approved by a country on the W.H.O.’s trusted list, the organization usually relies on that assessment to quickly sign off. But when a vaccine maker anywhere else applies for prequalification, the W.H.O. conducts a full evaluation from scratch, including a physical inspection of the manufacturing facilities.

The W.H.O. approved the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine at the end of 2020 less than two months after the makers applied for consideration, and it is expected to decide on the Moderna and AstraZeneca vaccines this month. The Chinese and Russian vaccines are still waiting in line, even though the review processes for those were initiated earlier.

In the course of reviewing the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, the W.H.O. worked closely with the European Medicines Agency, and approved it about 10 days after the E.M.A. had. There is no reason the W.H.O., while maintaining its standards, couldn’t also collaborate with health regulators in other countries to help local vaccine manufacturers get through the vetting process. It must urgently give all vaccine-producing countries the attention they deserve.

Some doctors and activists have put forward proposals to increase the delivery worldwide of vaccines produced in the West. These calls are well-intentioned, but they, too, assume that vaccines from Western countries are the only ones worth having — and waiting for.

There is a simpler solution, already at hand: It’s time to start trusting other countries’ vaccines.

Achal Prabhala is the coordinator of the AccessIBSA project, which campaigns for access to medicines, and a fellow of the Shuttleworth Foundation. Chee Yoke Ling is the executive director of Third World Network, an international policy research and advocacy organization headquartered in Penang, Malaysia.

if i'm not mistaken the Chinese have not published the results of phase 3 trials so I don't see how WHO can approve it?
 
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if i'm not mistaken the Chinese have not published the results of phase 3 trials so I don't see how WHO can approve it?

AFAIK none of the COVID-19 vaccines have been approved by W.H.O. so far.

In view of the shortage, W.H.O. has granted them approval for "Emergency Use Listing Status".
Don't get excited.

In fact China Canovac was the first to be applied on human for testing and that is in March 16, 2020.
All these tests will takes at least 4 years to complete.
But China vaccines testing are done more stringently and thoroughly for safety reason.
25% of China population are expected be vaccinated by June 2021.
They can afford it as the pandemic is over inside China.
 
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AFAIK none of the COVID-19 vaccines have been approved by W.H.O. so far.

In view of the shortage, W.H.O. has granted them approval for "Emergency Use Listing Status".
Don't get excited.

In fact China Canovac was the first to be applied on human for testing and that is in March 16, 2020.
All these tests will takes at least 4 years to complete.
But China vaccines testing are done more stringently and thoroughly for safety reason.
25% of China population are expected be vaccinated by June 2021.
They can afford it as the pandemic is over inside China.

ok just found this report online, SinoVac is expected to be authorized later this month by WHO.
I don't understand why China waited so long - do they not want to be part of COVAX?

 
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ok just found this report online, SinoVac is expected to be authorized later this month by WHO.
I don't understand why China waited so long - do they not want to be part of COVAX?

The truth is, it is every nation's national interest including China to vaccinate all their own people first but yet China set its own nation vaccination goal and quota at only 50% as it has already manage the pandemiC and the remaining will be destined for the rest of the world.

President Xi has openly pledged China vaccines for global public good once they are available and so far she has committed to what she said. Evil CCP, eh?

Covax is just a free vaccination program by W.H.O. for the poor nations.

As a nation, China has done more than W.H.O.already.
China exported vaccines to 45 nations and donated to more than 70 others.
Prompting the jealous US and her allies to termed such generosity as vaccine diplomacy.
:coffee: :sarcastic: :sarcastic: :sarcastic:
 
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The truth is, it is every nation's national interest including China to vaccinate all their own people first but yet China set its own nation vaccination goal and quota at only 50% as it has already manage the pandemiC and the remaining will be destined for the rest of the world.

President Xi has openly pledged China vaccines for global public good once they are available and so far she has committed to what she said. Evil CCP, eh?

Covax is just a free vaccination program by W.H.O. for the poor nations.

As a nation, China has done more than W.H.O.already.
China exported vaccines to 45 nations and donated to more than 70 others.
Prompting the jealous US and her allies to termed such generosity as vaccine diplomacy.
:coffee: :sarcastic: :sarcastic: :sarcastic:

COVAX is not free, WHO pays for it with contributions it receives from members states and private donors like the Gates foundation. Well anything outside COVAX comes with strings attached be it American, Chinese or Russian.
 
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COVAX is not free, WHO pays for it with contributions it receives from members states and private donors like the Gates foundation. Well anything outside COVAX comes with strings attached be it American, Chinese or Russian.
It is supplied absolutely FREE to all the nation that received it. Ghana being the first.
And that is what matters most.
 
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