AFRICA PROVES ROCKY TERRAIN FOR RUSSIAN AND CHINESE COVID-19 VACCINES
Russia and China are racing to plug the COVID-19 vaccine gap in Africa, hoping to cement their influence on a continent where many countries have yet to administer a single shot.
But, so far, vaccine donations from Beijing and Moscow have been small, the commercial deals they offer are costly, and some African governments are wary about a lack of data.
As rich countries ramp up their inoculation drives, Africa, without the resources to pre-order Pfizer, AstraZeneca, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines, is being left behind.
With Western nations facing criticism for hoarding supplies, flooding Africa with life-saving shots would be a soft-power coup for Russia and China.
Moscow has offered 300 million doses with financing to an African Union (AU) purchasing scheme.
Beijing has pledged nearly a quarter of all its vaccine donations to Africa, according to data compiled by Bridge Consulting, a Beijing-based health sector advisory.
“This is a vivid manifestation of China-Africa friendship,” China’s foreign ministry told Reuters.
“Africa is one of the key markets for Sputnik V,” said the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), the sovereign wealth fund marketing its Sputnik V vaccine abroad.
French President Emmanuel Macron says Europe and the United States risk losing influence in Africa over the issue.
However, John Nkengasong, head of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, cautioned against “vaccine diplomacy”, saying powers must not use token allocations to curry political influence.
“Africa will refuse to be that playing ground where we use COVID as a tool to manage relationships,” he said on a webinar hosted by the Atlantic Council think tank in late February.
“It becomes like you’re trying to sprinkle water on a very hot day on children … Then you can tick the box that you did that,” he said. “That’s not what we are after as a continent.”
While other developing regions have turned to Russia or China, in Africa their engagement has translated into few shots in arms.
Africa has received around 3.15 million shots from China – or less than 4% of its vaccine exports – Bridge Consulting data showed.
“The numbers of vaccines China is donating are not going to move the needle in any of these countries. But it’s as much about the optics,” said Eric Olander, co-founder of The China-Africa Project.
Russia has shipped a total of around 100,000 vaccine doses to Algeria, Tunisia and Guinea.
The global vaccine sharing scheme COVAX, meanwhile, delivered nearly 15 million shots to 22 African countries in its first 10 days.
The facility co-led by the World Health Organization, GAVI and others aims to ship 35 million doses to Africa by the end of the month and 720 million by the end of 2021.
That will still only be enough to inoculate those at greatest risk.
DATA DEFICIT
China’s leading vaccines – from the China National Pharmaceutical Group (Sinopharm) and Sinovac – are not yet approved for emergency use by the WHO. Neither is Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine.
China offered South Africa – the African nation hardest hit by the pandemic – 2 million shots, its health minister said.
But a government official involved in procurement told Reuters the lack of trial data meant Chinese vaccines were not being seriously considered for now. Sputnik V was also relegated to a second tier of vaccines South Africa says need more study, according to the health ministry.
Even some countries that accepted donations have shied away from purchases.
Uganda considered buying Chinese vaccines but is focused on COVAX due to their cost and the availability of data, said Ombeva Malande, director of the East Africa Centre for Vaccines and Immunization, which advised the government. Kenya is taking a similar line, he said.
Diana Atwine, permanent secretary in Uganda’s health ministry, said authorities would consider affordable vaccines approved by the WHO.
The head of Kenya’s vaccine task force confirmed it was not in talks to procure Chinese vaccines, and health ministry plans do not include Russian vaccines.