Jumat, 25 Desember 2020

Chinese COVID-19 vaccines are poised to fill gap, but will they work? - CNA

BEIJING: With rich countries snapping up supplies of COVID-19 vaccines, some parts of the world may have to rely on Chinese-developed shots to try to conquer the outbreak. The question: Will they work?

There is no outward reason to believe they won’t, but China has a history of vaccine scandals, and its drugmakers have revealed little about their final human trials and the more than 1 million emergency-use inoculations they say have been carried out inside the country already.

READ: Turkey says China's Sinovac COVID-19 vaccine 91.25% effective in late trials

Wealthy nations have reserved about 9 billion of the 12 billion mostly Western-developed shots expected to be produced next year, while COVAX, a global effort to ensure equal access to COVID-19 vaccines, has fallen short of its promised capacity of 2 billion doses.

For those countries that have not yet secured a vaccine, China may be the only solution.

China has six candidates in the last stage of trials and is one of the few nations that can manufacture vaccines on a large scale. Government officials have announced a capacity of 1 billion doses next year, with President Xi Jinping vowing China's vaccines will be a boon to the world.

The potential use of its vaccine by millions of people in other countries gives China an opportunity both to repair the damage to its reputation from an outbreak that escaped its borders and to show the world it can be a major scientific player.

Yet past scandals have damaged its own citizens' trust in its vaccines, with manufacturing and supply chain problems casting doubt on whether it can really be a saviour.

“A question mark remains over how China can ensure the delivery of reliable vaccines,” said Joy Zhang, a professor who studies the ethics of emerging science at the University of Kent in Britain. 

She cited China's “non-transparency over scientific data and a troubled history with vaccine delivery". 

READ: Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and Sinovac: A look at three key COVID-19 vaccines

Bahrain last week became the second country to approve a Chinese COVID-19 vaccine, joining the United Arab Emirates. Morocco plans to use Chinese vaccines in a mass immunisation campaign slated to start this month. 

Chinese vaccines are also awaiting approval in Turkey, Indonesia and Brazil, while testing continues in more than a dozen countries, including Russia, Egypt and Mexico.

In some countries, Chinese vaccines are viewed with suspicion. 

Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro has repeatedly sown doubt about the effectiveness of Chinese company Sinovac's vaccine candidate without citing any evidence, and said Brazilians won’t be used as “guinea pigs". 

Many experts praise China's vaccine capabilities.

“The studies look to be well done," said Jamie Triccas, head of immunology and infectious diseases at the University of Sydney’s medical school, referring to clinical trial results published in scientific journals. 

“I wouldn’t be overly concerned about that.”

READ: China's CAS COVID-19 vaccine induces immune response in mid-stage tests

China has been building up its immunisation programs for more than a decade. It has produced successful vaccines on a large scale for its own population, including vaccinations for measles and hepatitis, said Jin Dong-yan, a medical professor at the University of Hong Kong.

“There are no major outbreaks in China for any of these diseases," he said. "That means the vaccines are safe and effective.”

China has worked with the Gates Foundation and others to improve manufacturing quality in the past decade. The World Health Organization has prequalified five non-COVID-19 Chinese vaccines, which allows UN agencies to buy them for other countries.

The companies whose products won prequalification include Sinovac and state-owned Sinopharm, both leading developers of COVID-19 vaccines.

Yet, the Wuhan Institute of Biological Products, a Sinopharm subsidiary behind one of the COVID-19 candidates, was caught up in a vaccine scandal in 2018.

Government inspectors found that the company, based in the city where the coronavirus was first detected last year, had made hundreds of thousands of ineffective doses of a combination vaccine for diphtheria, tetanus and whooping cough because of an equipment malfunction.

That same year it was reported that Changsheng Biotechnology Co falsified data about a rabies vaccine.

In 2016, Chinese media revealed that 2 million doses of various vaccines for children had been improperly stored and sold throughout the country for years.

Vaccination rates fell after those scandals.

“All of my local Chinese friends, they’re white-collar, they’re well off, and none of them will buy medicine made in China. That’s just the way it is,” said Ray Yip, former country director of the Gates Foundation in China. 

He said he is one of the few who don't mind buying Chinese-made pharmaceuticals.

China revised its laws in 2017 and 2019 to tighten the management of vaccine storage and step up inspections and penalties for faulty vaccines.

The country's major COVID-19 vaccine developers have published some scientific findings in peer-reviewed scientific journals. 

READ: China to start opening COVID-19 vaccination programme to general public

But international experts questioned how China recruited volunteers and what kind of tracking there was for possible side effects. Chinese companies and government officials haven’t released details.

Now, after the release of data on the effectiveness of the Western-made vaccines developed by Pfizer and Moderna, experts are waiting to see the Chinese results. 

Regulators in the UAE, where a Sinopharm vaccine was tested, have said it appeared 86per cent effective based on interim clinical trial data. On Thursday, Turkey's government announced that Sinovac is 91.25 per cent effective from interim data.

Sinopharm did not respond to a request for comment about the vaccine’s efficacy data. Sinovac and CanSino, another Chinese vaccine company, did not respond to interview requests.

For some people in countries where the pandemic shows no signs of easing, a vaccine’s nation of origin doesn't matter.

“I intend to take it, the first one that comes, if it goes right,” said Daniel Alves Santos, a cook at a Rio de Janeiro restaurant. “And I hope God helps."

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2020-12-25 05:50:34Z
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Kamis, 24 Desember 2020

Hong Kong imposes 21-day quarantine for visitors, adds South Africa to banned list - The Straits Times

HONG KONG (REUTERS) - Hong Kong extended a compulsory quarantine by an extra seven days to 21 days for all visitors outside China, effective Friday (Dec 25), in stepped-up efforts to prevent a new variant of the novel coronavirus from spreading.

Authorities also banned all people who have stayed in South Africa in the past 21 days from boarding for Hong Kong.

Hong Kong has already banned all flights arriving from the United Kingdom from Monday and the city said on Wednesday two students who returned from Britain were likely to be infected with the new super-virulent strain of Covid-19.

In a statement midnight on Friday, authorities said people who have stayed in places outside China during the 21 days before their arrival have to undergo 21 days of compulsory quarantine in designated quarantine hotels.

"Noting the drastic change of the global pandemic situation with the new virus variant found in more countries, there is a need for the government to introduce resolute measures immediately... to ensure that no case would slip through the net even under very exceptional cases where the incubation period of the virus is longer than 14 days," a government spokesman said.

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2020-12-25 02:35:21Z
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South Korea sets highest daily COVID-19 toll, struggles to contain latest surge - CNA

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  1. South Korea sets highest daily COVID-19 toll, struggles to contain latest surge  CNA
  2. South Korea sets highest daily coronavirus toll, struggles to contain latest surge  The Straits Times
  3. South Korea's Moon under fire for vaccine plans as Covid-19 cases surge  AsiaOne
  4. South Korea to import J&J, Pfizer COVID-19 vaccines for 16 million people  CNA
  5. S. Korea's vaccine plans under fire as daily cases surge  The Straits Times
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-12-25 01:53:30Z
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UK and EU reach post-Brexit trade agreement - CNA

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  1. UK and EU reach post-Brexit trade agreement  CNA
  2. 'The deal is done': EU and Britain clinch narrow Brexit accord  The Straits Times
  3. Britain and Europe: A fresh new beginning?  BBC News
  4. At long last we have a Brexit deal – and it's as bad as you thought  The Guardian
  5. The Guardian view on a Brexit deal: relief that leaves a bitter taste  The Guardian
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-12-24 19:32:50Z
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UK and EU reach post-Brexit trade agreement - CNA

BRUSSELS: Britain and the European Union struck a trade deal on Thursday (Dec 24) after 10 months of intense negotiation allowed them to soften the economic shock of Brexit.

When the UK leaves the EU single market at the New Year it will not now face tariffs on cross-Channel commerce, despite breaking off half a century of close partnership.

"We've taken back control of our laws and our destiny. We've taken back control of every jot and tittle of our regulation in a way that is complete, and unfettered," British Prime Minister Boris Johnson declared.

READ: COVID-19 vaccine could be airlifted to UK if Brexit snarls ports - Minister

EU Commission president Ursula von der Leyen was more measured.

"At the end of a successful negotiations journey I normally feel joy. But today, I only feel quiet satisfaction and, frankly speaking, relief," she said, citing British playwright Shakespeare: "Parting is such sweet sorrow."

But she also showed her steely side, warning that, protected by the deal from unfair British competition, "The single market will be fair and remain so."

And she urged the 440 million Europeans remaining in the 27-nation union to put the drama of the four years since Britain's Brexit referendum behind them and to look to the future.

"I say it is time to leave Brexit behind. Our future is made in Europe," she said.

READ: Deal or no deal, Britain to pay high price for Brexit

Britain formally left the EU in January after a divisive referendum in 2016, the first country to split from the political and economic project that was born as the continent rebuilt in the aftermath of World War II.

But London remains tied to the EU's rules during a transition period that runs until midnight on Dec 31, when the UK will leave the bloc's single market and customs union.

'SOLID FOUNDATIONS'

The final 2,000-page agreement was held up by a last-minute dispute over fishing as both sides haggled over the access EU fishermen will get to Britain's waters after the end of the year.

Von der Leyen said that although the UK would become a "third country" it would be a trusted partner.

READ: UK universities will lose cachet post-Brexit, EU students warn

READ: How will Brexit rules affect the Premier League?

Johnson - who rode to power pledging to "get Brexit done" - insisted it was a "good deal for the whole of Europe and for our friends and partners as well".

"It will not be a bad thing in my view to have a prosperous, dynamic and contented UK on your doorstep," he said from Downing Street.

Leaders around the continent were quick to herald the 11th-hour accord that heads off the threat of Britain crashing out of the EU after 47 years of shared history with no follow-on rules.

Irish premier Micheal Martin - whose EU member state would have been hard hit by a no-deal - said the accord was the "least bad version of Brexit possible".

"There is no such thing as a 'good Brexit' for Ireland. But we have worked hard to minimise the negative consequences," he said.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she was "confident" that the deal was a "good outcome" as it now goes over to EU member states to agree.

For French President Emmanuel Macron - often portrayed as a bogeyman by the British tabloids - "Europe's unity and firmness paid off".

EU STATES TO RATIFY

Following the announcement of the political accord, von der Leyen's Commission will send the text to the remaining 27 European member states.

Their ambassadors will meet on Friday, Christmas Day, and are expected to take two or three days to analyse the agreement and decide whether to approve its provisional implementation.

The UK parliament will also have to interrupt its end of year holidays to vote on the deal on Dec 30, and with the opposition backing its implementation is should pass easily.

Assuming the process goes as planned, the negotiating teams will have agreed the mammoth deal in record time.

But with Britain outside the EU single market and customs area, cross-Channel traders will still face a battery of new regulations and delays.

Economists expect both economies, already weakened by the coronavirus epidemic, to take a hit as supply chains are disrupted and costs mount.

Despite this, the threat of a return to tariffs will have been removed, and relations between the former partners will rest on a surer footing.

All sides will look to put a positive spin on the deal to make it look like they did not give too much away.

But it will be seen as win by Johnson, as well as a success for von der Leyen and her chief negotiator Michel Barnier, who led almost 10 months of intense talks with Britain's David Frost.

After the shock 2016 referendum, in which British voters narrowly chose to leave the union, Brexiteers boasted that they could win the "easiest trade deal in history".

But European capitals were concerned that if such a large rival on their doorstep were to deregulate its industry their firms would face unfair competition.

Brussels insisted the only way to keep the land border between Ireland and the UK open was to keep Northern Ireland, a British province, within its customs union.

And members balked at giving up access to Britain's rich fishing waters, which support fleets in France, Belgium, Denmark, Ireland and the Netherlands.

It was the question of fish that emerged as the last stumbling block as late as this week, when member states - led by France - rebuffed UK demands.

London pushed to reduce EU fishing fleets' share of the estimated €650-million annual haul by more than a third, with changes phased in over three years. The EU was insisting on 25 per cent over at least six years.

In the end, the final agreement settled on the EU's figure but cut the length of the transition period during which it would be phased in to five-and-a-half years, an EU official said.

After this time access to Britain's fishing grounds will be negotiated on an annual basis.

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2020-12-24 18:11:15Z
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‘The deal is done’: Britain seals narrow Brexit accord with EU - South China Morning Post

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  1. ‘The deal is done’: Britain seals narrow Brexit accord with EU  South China Morning Post
  2. On the cusp of Brexit trade deal, EU and UK hash out final details  CNA
  3. Scotland's papers: UK and EU 'ready to sign deal' and freezing Christmas  BBC News
  4. At long last we have a Brexit deal – and it's as bad as you thought  The Guardian
  5. The Guardian view on a Brexit deal: relief that leaves a bitter taste  The Guardian
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-12-24 17:19:46Z
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Taiwan fines EVA Air US$35000 after pilot blamed for COVID-19 infection - channelnewsasia.com

TAIPEI: Taiwan's Transport Ministry on Thursday (Dec 24) fined EVA Airways Corp NT$1 million (US$35,000) after the government blamed one of its pilots for a rare locally transmitted case of COVID-19 because he failed to follow disease prevention rules.

Taiwan had until this week not reported domestic transmission since Apr 12, thanks to early and effective moves to stop the virus, including mass mask-wearing and strict quarantines for all arrivals.

READ: Airline sacks pilot blamed for Taiwan's first local COVID-19 infection since April

But the government was jolted by Tuesday's announcement of the domestic infection of a woman who is a friend of a New Zealand pilot confirmed to have been infected earlier this week having flown routes to the United States.

EVA Air has sacked the pilot, who has not been named and is being treated in hospital.

The case has ignited public anger after the government said he had not reported all his contacts and the places he had been, nor worn a face mask in the cockpit when he should have.

In a statement referring to the "uproar" caused by the case, the Transport Ministry cited its minister Lin Chia-lung as saying the airline had not fully put in place epidemic prevention measures.

READ: Keep calm, Taiwan says after first local COVID-19 case in 8 months

For breaching rules related to COVID-19, the ministry will fine the airline NT$1 million, the maximum statutory fine it can make, it added.

The ministry will require airlines tighten their epidemic prevention measures for air crew while also issuing its own new rules, it said.

EVA Air, which has already apologised for the incident, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. It has not been possible to reach the pilot for comment.

EVA Air, like most airlines, is operating a very reduced schedule due to border restrictions globally.

BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the coronavirus outbreak and its developments

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2020-12-24 09:58:31Z
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