Covid-19: Africa jab shortfall could take world ‘back to square one’ – WHO

Africa faces a 470 million shortfall in Covid-19 vaccine doses this year after the Covax alliance cut its projected shipments, raising the risk of new and deadly variants, the WHO said on Thursday.

Only 17 percent of the continent’s population will now be vaccinated by the end of this year, compared with the 40 percent target set by the World Health Organization, the global agency’s Africa unit said at its weekly briefing in

the Congolese capita of Brazzaville.

“The staggering inequity and severe lag in shipments of vaccines threatens to turn areas in Africa … into breeding grounds for vaccine-resistant variants,” said Matshidiso Moeti, WHO’s Africa director.

“This could end up sending the whole world back to square one.”

Due to global shortages, the Covax alliance set up to ensure equitable delivery of jabs, will ship about 150 million fewer doses of vaccine to Africa than planned.

Taking into account this shortfall, the 470 million doses of vaccine now expected in Africa will allow only 17 percent of the population to be fully protected, the WHO’s regional office said.

“As long as rich countries lock Covax out of the market, Africa will miss its vaccination goals,” Moetti said.

The reduction in the vaccination target comes as Africa passes the eight million mark in infections this week, the WHO said.

About 95 million doses should have been received in Africa via Covax during September, but despite the resumption of shipments, “Africa has only been able to vaccinate 50 million people, or 3.6 percent of its population,” says WHO Africa.

The Covax international funding mechanism is supposed to allow 92 disadvantaged states and territories to receive free vaccines funded by more prosperous nations.

Last week, it revised its forecasts downwards, explaining the lack of doses “by export bans, the priority given to bilateral agreements between manufacturers and countries, delays in filing applications for approval”, among other reasons.

Source: Nam News Network

New Zealand Cricket Team Cancels Pakistan Tour Over Security Concerns

A New Zealand cricket team announced it was abandoning its tour of Pakistan, citing security concerns Friday, the day it was supposed to have its first match.

“Following an escalation in the New Zealand Government threat levels for Pakistan, and advice from NZC security advisers on the ground, it has been decided the BLACKCAPS will not continue with the tour,” a press statement from the New Zealand cricket team said.

Pakistani officials reacted strongly, calling the decision “unilateral” and a conspiracy against Pakistan’s image.

“None of our various intelligence agencies had received any indication of a security threat,” said Pakistan’s Interior Minister Sheikh Rasheed Ahmed.

He added that Pakistan had offered to hold the matches without spectators, but the offer was rejected.

Pakistani Federal Minister for Maritime Affairs Ali Haider Zaidi said he was “appalled” at the decision.

“Sadly, global politics has won over the great game of cricket! There were no security threats! @jacindaardern,” he said, tagging the New Zealand prime minister in his tweet.

Prime Minister Imran Khan personally called Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern to guarantee the team’s safety, but she stood by her team’s decision, according to Ahmed and the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB).

The PCB said it had arranged “fool proof security” for the visiting team and New Zealand security officials had been satisfied with their arrangements.

“[C]ricket lovers in Pakistan and around the world will be disappointed by this last-minute withdrawal,” the board said.

The chief executive of the Black Caps, David White, said he could not ignore the advice he was receiving.

“I understand this will be a blow for the PCB, who have been wonderful hosts, but player safety is paramount, and we believe this is the only responsible option,” he said.

The two sides were to play three one-day matches in Rawalpindi, known as the twin city of the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, followed by a series of five limited over matches or T-20s in Pakistan’s second-largest city, Lahore.

The chief executive of the PCB, Wasim Khan, told VOA the New Zealand team would head home Saturday on a chartered plane.

An English cricket team was scheduled to visit Pakistan in October, but Interior Minister Ahmed said that tour also was now in doubt.

“Ministry of Interior has informed me that the English team is also thinking along the same lines. On our part, we are ready to welcome them. There is no security threat in our country to either New Zealand or England,” he said.

International cricket teams stopped visiting Pakistan after an attack on a Sri Lankan cricket team in 2009 in Lahore that wounded seven members of the team.

Pakistan went through several years of violence starting approximately in 2007 as extremist groups blaming Pakistan for siding with the United States in its war on terror started attacking both its security forces and civilians.

Pakistani officials claim up to 80,000 of their citizens died in these attacks, and the country suffered up to $150 billion worth of damage to its economy.

In 2016, Pakistani cricket authorities formed the Pakistan Super League, six cricket teams representing six cities. The teams included international players in an effort to revive international cricket in Pakistan. The first two seasons of the league were played outside Pakistan in the United Arab Emirates.

The first international team to return to Pakistan was Zimbabwe in 2015.

Source: Voice of America