India approves J&J’s single-shot COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use

India gave emergency approval to Johnson and Johnson’s single-shot coronavirus vaccine Saturday to ramp up its flailing immunization campaign. (File/AFP)
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Updated 07 August 2021
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India approves J&J’s single-shot COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use

  • Health minister Mansukh Mandaviya said the approval will boost the fight against the pandemic in India
  • Johnson and Johnson’s vaccine is the fifth to be approved in the country

NEW DELHI: India gave emergency approval to Johnson and Johnson’s single-shot coronavirus vaccine Saturday to ramp up its flailing immunization campaign as fears grow of a new wave of infections.
Health minister Mansukh Mandaviya said the approval will boost the fight against the pandemic in India, where at least 200,000 people died in a brutal two-month wave up to mid-June.
“India expands its vaccine basket! Johnson and Johnson’s single-dose COVID-19 vaccine is given approval for Emergency Use in India,” the minister said on Twitter.
No indication has been given as to when the US company’s doses will reach India.
The nation of 1.3 billion people has administered 500 million vaccine doses so far, but barely eight percent of the population has had two shots.
Johnson and Johnson’s vaccine is the fifth to be approved after Oxford-AstraZeneca’s Covishield, the home developed Covaxin, Russia’s Sputnik V, and the US-made Moderna jab.
India remains the second worst-hit nation after the United States, with more than 32 million confirmed cases and 427,000 deaths. Because of under-reporting experts say the real toll is much higher.
They also warn that the slow vaccination pace puts India at risk from any new infection crisis. The number of new cases and deaths has started rising again in the past two weeks.
The government’s free immunization drive relies heavily on Covishield and Covaxin and producers are struggling to meet demand.
Sputnik has not yet scaled up production and Moderna is yet to import any shots.


Trump to launch Board of Peace that some fear rivals UN

Updated 9 sec ago
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Trump to launch Board of Peace that some fear rivals UN

  • US president sees board as going beyond Gaza to address global challenges
  • 35 countries including Israel, Saudi Arabia, Turkiye have committed; Russia considering
DAVOS, Switzerland: US President Donald Trump will on Thursday launch his Board of Peace, originally envisaged to help end the Gaza war but which he now sees having a wider role that Europe and some others fear will rival or undermine the United Nations.
Trump, who will chair the board, has invited dozens of other world leaders to join it and sees the grouping addressing other global challenges beyond Gaza, though he does not intend it as a replacement for the United Nations, he has said.
Some traditional US allies have balked at joining the board, ‌which Trump says ‌permanent members must help fund with a payment of $1 billion ‌each, ⁠either responding ‌cautiously or declining the invitation.
No other permanent member of the UN Security Council — the five nations with the most say over international law since the end of World War Two — except the US has yet committed to join.
Russia said late on Wednesday it was studying the proposal after Trump said it would join. France has declined. Britain said on Thursday it was not joining at present. China has not yet said whether it will join.
However, around 35 countries have committed to ⁠join including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Turkiye and Belarus.
The signing ceremony will be held in Davos, Switzerland, where ‌the annual World Economic Forum bringing together global political and ‍business leaders is taking place.
Sputtering Gaza ceasefire
The ‍board’s charter will task it with promoting peace around the world, a copy seen ‍by Reuters showed, and Trump has already named other senior US officials to join it, as well as former British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
The ceasefire in Gaza, agreed in October, has sputtered for months with Israel and Hamas trading blame for repeated bursts of violence in which several Israeli soldiers and hundreds of Palestinians have been killed.
Both sides accuse each other of further violations, with Israel saying Hamas has procrastinated on returning a final body of a ⁠dead hostage and Hamas saying Israel has continued to curb aid into Gaza despite an ongoing humanitarian catastrophe.
Each side rejects the other’s accusations.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has accepted an invitation by Trump to join the board, the Israeli leader’s office says. Palestinian factions have endorsed Trump’s plan and given backing to a transitional Palestinian committee meant to administer the Gaza Strip with oversight by the board.
Trump has been characteristically bold in his comments on Gaza, saying the ceasefire amounts to “peace in the Middle East.”
Even as the first phase of the truce stumbles, its next stage must address much tougher long-term issues that have bedeviled earlier negotiations, including Hamas disarmament, security control in Gaza and eventual Israeli withdrawal.
On Wednesday in Davos, Trump met Egyptian President Abdel Fattah ‌El-Sisi, whose country played a major role in Gaza truce mediation talks, and they discussed the board.