Philippines to receive first COVID-19 vaccines, start inoculations next week

The vaccination program will be crucial for Philippine efforts to revive its economy. (Reuters)
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Updated 25 February 2021
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Philippines to receive first COVID-19 vaccines, start inoculations next week

  • The Philippines will be the last Southeast Asian country to receive its initial set of vaccines
  • Vaccination program will be crucial for Philippine efforts to revive its economy

MANILA: The Philippines will take delivery of its first COVID-19 vaccines at the weekend, allowing it to kick off its inoculation program from next week, a senior official said on Thursday.
Despite having among the highest number of coronavirus cases and deaths in Asia, the Philippines will be the last Southeast Asian country to receive its initial set of vaccines.
The delivery of 600,000 doses Sinovac Biotech’s vaccines, donated by China, will arrive on Sunday, said Harry Roque, spokesman for President Rodrigo Duterte.
“It rolls out on Monday because our countrymen are excited,” he said of the vaccination program.
Among the first to be inoculated will be an official from a hospital who lost both parents to the coronavirus, plus a tricycle driver, Roque said.
The Philippines has ordered 25 million doses from Sinovac and was supposed to receive its first batch on Feb. 23. That was delayed emergency use authorization was only given this week.
Aside from Sinovac, 10,000 doses of a vaccine developed by China’s Sinopharm will arrive soon, under a “compassionate use” for Duterte’s security detail. Doses from AstraZeneca will arrive in March, Roque said.
“I have to admit, if we insisted on Western brands, we will still wait for its arrival,” he added.
Duterte, who has pursued warmer ties with China and has a strained relationship with many Western countries, has previously said he wanted to procure COVID-19 vaccines from China or Russia.
The vaccination program will be crucial for Philippine efforts to revive its economy, which suffered a record 9.5 percent slump last year due to strict and lengthy lockdowns that hit consumer spending and saw big job losses.


French aerospace firms fret over ‘weaponization’ of global supply chains

Updated 22 min 21 sec ago
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French aerospace firms fret over ‘weaponization’ of global supply chains

  • France’s aerospace industry fears that geopolitical tensions could disrupt access to critical materials, especially rare earths

PARIS: France’s aerospace industry voiced ​alarm on Thursday over the “weaponization” of global supply chains as major ‌powers ‌pursue ‌their ⁠geopolitical ​agendas, and ‌warned that rare earths remained a potential pressure point despite a ⁠US-China trade ‌truce.
GIFAS aerospace ‍association ‍president Olivier ‍Andries, who is also the CEO of engine ​maker Safran, also expressed concerns over ⁠the lack of a domestic budget for 2026, saying French parliamentarians had “lost direction.”