This picture shows vials of the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine in Paris on March 11, 2021.AFP PHOTO
By AFP
Thailand on Friday joined several European nations in suspending the
AstraZeneca vaccine over blood clot fears, despite a range of health
authorities around the world insisting it was safe.
The move came
just hours after US President Joe Biden offered Covid-weary Americans
hope of a return to some kind of normality by July 4, marking the
national holiday as his target for “independence” from the virus.
After
a shaky start, the US has ramped up its vaccination programme,
following the advice of scientists who say jabs are the only way out of a
pandemic that has killed 2.6 million people around the world.
But
global hopes received a blow Thursday when Denmark, Norway, Iceland,
Italy and Romania postponed or limited the rollout of their quota of
Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccines after isolated reports of recipients
developing blood clots.
Thailand followed suit on Friday.
Health regulators stressed there was no evidence of any link, but they were acting out of an abundance of caution.
Australia,
Mexico and the Philippines said they would continue their rollouts as
they had found no reason to alter course. Canada said there was no
evidence the jab causes adverse reactions.
Thailand’s decision led to
the embarrassing spectacle of Prime Minister Prayut Chan-O-Cha abruptly
cancelling his own televised jab.
“Vaccine injection for Thais must
be safe, we do not have to be in a hurry,” said Piyasakol
Sakolsatayadorn, an adviser for the country’s Covid-19 vaccine
committee.
Fight not over
In the US, Biden laid out the path for escape from the darkest days of the pandemic in the world’s worst-hit country.
“This
fight is far from over,” Biden said in his first televised primetime
address as president, delivering an emotional tribute to the more than
530,000 Americans who have died from Covid-19.
He said Americans
could overcome the virus if they worked together and followed health
experts’ guidelines on wearing masks and getting vaccinated.
“Just as
we are emerging from a dark winter into a hopeful spring and summer is
not the time to not stick with the rules,” he said.
If Americans stay
the course, they may be able to mark their cherished July 4th national
holiday in somewhat normal circumstances, with a backyard barbecue, he
said.
“That will make this Independence Day something truly special
where we not only mark our independence as a nation but we begin to mark
our independence from this virus.”
‘Not good enough’
After falling behind in its immunisation effort, the EU is now fighting hard to accelerate its vaccine push.
It has targeted AstraZeneca, whose shares plunged more than 2.5 percent on the London Stock Exchange over the vaccine concerns, for censure over its failure to meet delivery promises.
The head of the EU’s coronavirus vaccine supply task force said the pace of the company’s production was “not good enough” to meet its obligations for the first quarter of the year, the latest in a bitter spat between the 27-nation bloc and the company.
“AstraZeneca vaccines delivery: I see efforts, but not ‘best efforts’,” Thierry Breton wrote on Twitter.
The
EU approved the single-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine on Thursday,
which is stored at higher temperatures than competitors and is easier to
distribute.
Despite the sluggish bloc-wide rollout, Greece on
Thursday said it is aiming to reopen for tourists by mid-May because of
the acceleration of its own programme.
In another boost for vaccine
hopes, a real-world study in Israel showed the Pfizer/BioNTech jabs to
be 97 percent effective against symptomatic Covid cases, higher than
originally thought.
– ‘Greatest moral test’
Since first
emerging in China at the end of 2019, the coronavirus has infected more
than 118 million people, with few parts of the globe left untouched.
Countries
have jostled for the most effective vaccines and enough doses to
inoculate their populations, in some cases many times over.
United
Nations chief Antonio Guterres on Thursday lashed out at what he called
the “many examples of vaccine nationalism and hoarding” that will
prevent some countries from getting the resources to bring their health
crises to an end.
“Many low-income countries have not yet received a single dose,” he said.
“The global vaccination campaign represents the greatest moral test of our times.”