Tuesday, December 08, 2020

Trump administration passed up chance to buy millions of additional Pfizer vaccine doses

By ZEKE MILLER and JONATHAN LEMIRE
Monday, December 7, 2020 9:47PM




Lucy Yang has more on reports that the Trump administration passed up the chance to buy millions of additional Pfizer vaccine doses.


WASHINGTON -- The Trump administration opted last summer not to lock in a chance to buy millions of additional doses of one of the leading coronavirus vaccine contenders, a decision that could delay the delivery of a second batch of doses until manufacturer Pfizer fulfills other international contracts.

The revelation, confirmed Monday by people familiar with the matter, came a day before President Donald Trump aimed to take credit for the speedy development of forthcoming coronavirus vaccines at a White House summit Tuesday.

Pfizer's vaccine is expected to be endorsed by a panel of Food and Drug Administration advisers as soon as this week, with delivery of 100 million doses - enough for 50 million Americans - expected in coming months.

Under its contract with Pfizer, the Trump administration committed to buy an initial 100 million doses, with an option to purchase as many as five times more.

This summer, the White House opted not to lock in an additional 100 million doses for delivery in the second quarter of 2021, according to people who spoke about the matter on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss it publicly.

Days ahead of the vaccine's expected approval, the administration is reversing course, but it is not clear that Pfizer, which has since made commitments to other countries, will be able to meet the latest request on the same timeline.

The Pfizer vaccine is one of two on track for emergency FDA authorization this month, the other coming from drugmaker Moderna.

The Trump administration insisted late Monday that between those two vaccines and others in the pipeline, the U.S. will be able to accommodate any American who wants to be vaccinated by the end of the second quarter of 2021.

The administration's decision not to lock in additional Pfizer purchases last summer was first reported by The New York Times. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar told NBC the administration is "continuing to work across manufacturers to expand the availability of releasable, of FDA-approved vaccine as quickly as possible. ... We do still have that option for an additional 500 million doses."

Seeking to tamp down public skepticism over the vaccine and secure a key component of Trump's legacy, Tuesday's summit will highlight the administration's plans to distribute and administer the vaccine. But officials from President-elect Joe Biden's transition team, which will oversee the bulk of the largest vaccination program in the nation's history once he takes office Jan. 20, were not invited.

The "Operation Warp Speed" summit will feature Trump, Vice President Mike Pence and a host of government experts, state leaders and business executives, as the White House looks to explain that the vaccine is safe and lay out the administration's plans to bring it to the American people.

Senior administration officials provided details on the summit on Monday. An official with the Biden transition confirmed no invitation was extended.

Officials from the pharmaceutical companies developing the vaccines also were not expected to attend, despite receiving invitations, according to people familiar with the matter. Some expressed concerns about the event contributing to the politicization of the vaccine development process and potentially further inhibiting public confidence in the drugs.

Trump is set to kick off the event with remarks aiming to "celebrate" vaccine development, according to an official who previewed the event. Trump also will sign an executive order to prioritize Americans for coronavirus vaccines procured by the federal government. A second official said the order would restrict the U.S. government from donating doses to other nations until there is excess supply to meet domestic demand. Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss plans for the summit.

It was not immediately clear what, if any, impact the order would have on other nations' abilities to access the vaccines. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Monday he expects his country to receive about 250,000 doses of a vaccine from Pfizer by the end of the year.

The Food and Drug Administration's panel of outside vaccine experts is to meet Thursday to conduct a final review of the Pfizer drug, and it will meet later this month on a vaccine developed by Moderna. The FDA is not required to follow the panel's advice, though it usually does. Agency decisions on the two drugs are expected within days of each meeting. Both have been determined to be 95% effective against the virus that causes COVID-19. Plans call for distributing and then administering about 40 million doses of the two companies' vaccines by the end of the year - with the first doses shipping within hours of FDA clearance.

Biden said Friday that "there's no detailed plan that we've seen" for how to get the vaccines out of containers, into syringes and then into people's arms.

Trump administration officials insist that such plans have been developed, with the bulk of the work falling to states and municipal governments to ensure their most vulnerable populations are vaccinated first. The administration says it has leveraged partnerships with manufacturers, distributers and health care providers, so that outside of settings like veterans' hospitals, "it is highly unlikely that a single federal employee will touch a dose of vaccine before it goes into your arm."

In all, about 50,000 vaccination sites are enrolled in the government's distribution system, the officials said.

Each of the forthcoming vaccines has unique logistical challenges related to distribution and administration. The Pfizer vaccine must be transported at super-cooled temperatures, and comes in batches of 975 doses. Each vial contains 5 doses, requiring careful plannning. The administration has prepared detailed videos for providers on how to safely prepare and administer doses, to be posted after the FDA issues its emergency use authorization.

One such plan is to be announced Tuesday: Pharmacy chains CVS and Walgreens have stood up a "mobile vaccination service" ready to vaccinate people in every nursing home and long-term care facility in the country. The roughly 3 million residents of those facilities are among the most vulnerable for COVID-19 and have been placed at the front of the line to access the vaccine, along with more than 20 million healthcare workers. So far 80-85% of the facilities have signed on to the service, the officials said.
Pfizer tells US officials that it cannot provide substantial additional vaccine doses until late June, July - report

Tue 8 Dec 2020 
Author: Justin Low

Washington Post reports on the matter



This adds to the earlier story by the New York Times earlier here.

The report above cites multiple individuals familiar with the situation in saying that Pfizer has told the Trump administration that it cannot provide substantial additional doses of its coronavirus vaccine until late June or July.

This is because other countries have already rushed to buy up most of its supply.

Again, this is a bit of a setback to the timeline in getting things back to "normal" in the US as it may mean that the virus situation may persist for quite some time yet unless they are able to secure larger quantities from other vaccine providers.
Moderna, Pfizer decline WH invitation for COVID-19 "vaccine summit"

Marisa Fernandez AXIOS


Photo: Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images


The Trump administration is hosting a "vaccine summit" on Tuesday that will include President Trump, Vice President Mike Pence, pharmacies and logistics companies, but not any vaccine manufacturer representatives.

The big picture: Moderna and Pfizer declined the White House’s invitation, Stat News first reported. But a senior administration official said Monday that the administration ultimately deemed the vaccine manufacturers presence “not appropriate” due to their pending EUA applications.

Why it matters: The summit takes place just two days before the Food and Drug Administration advisory committee is scheduled to review Pfizer's data and decide whether to approve the vaccine for emergency use authorization. Moderna is expected to be reviewed in the coming weeks.

Details:
The summit will have select governors and health officials, including the FDA's Peter Marks, so Americans can better understand the vaccine approval and distribution process on a federal and state level, the White House said.
Trump will also sign an executive order reinforcing Americans' guarantee to the vaccine.

Between the lines: Much of this event is a PR stunt from the White House, which is still reeling over Pfizer and Moderna making their vaccine announcements after the election.
Worldwide ginger shortage caused by poor harvests and coronavirus-hit Chinese farms

Ginger is a key ingredient of gingerbread men, a Christmas favourite


According to The Times  Asda reported a 'temporary shortage' while Tesco said there is high demand because more people were cooking and baking at home. 

It appears that part of the reason this year's supply is limited, is the poor harvest and an impact on the coronavirus-hit Chinese farms. 

Last year China suffered a poor harvest and this year the coronavirus pandemic led to labour shortages on farms. 

The situation has only gotten worse by another poor harvest in October- while the demand of the spice has been rising. 

As a result the wholesale prices have soared. 

+2

Ginger is a very popular spice used all over the world 

Marcel Verdellen, of Satori, told the Fresh Plaza food website: 'Generally, you'll make a killing if you can offer ginger now. 

'It's not a question of sales. It's more one of being able to deliver the goods. After all, people still want to offer ginger. 

'It's a standard supermarket item. And there aren't any alternatives. 

Gabriel Bonancin of Fresh Quality which imports ginger to Europe added: 'There was a gap in the supply from China, and they are usually the biggest supplier of ginger, so this has brought a lot of opportunities for other ginger supplying countries such as Brazil. 
India: Farmers launch nationwide strike over new laws

Farmer unions in India have called for a general strike over new agricultural laws that are aimed at liberalizing the industry. The nationwide shutdown comes a day before talks with the government.


Indian farmers called for a one-day nationwide strike on Tuesday after days of blockading New Delhi in a bid to force the government to repeal its new market-friendly farm laws.

Tuesday's strike, called Bharat Bandh, will see tens of thousands of farmers blocking key roads and rail lines across the country for several hours, affecting transport services and offices.

They have received support from railway workers, truck drivers and other unions, who will be joining them in the strike.

The farmers have emphasized that the strike will be a peaceful protest, and they will ensure that emergency services such as ambulances and fire brigades aren't affected.

"Our protest is peaceful, and we'll continue that way. Bharat Bandh is a symbolic protest to register our opposition. It is to show that we don't support some of the policies of the government," farmers' union leader Rakesh Tikait told reporters.

Read more: India farmers threaten Delhi blockade in protest of Modi's agriculture reforms

The strike comes after five rounds of talks between farmers' unions and the government failed. The sixth round of talks is scheduled for Wednesday.

Tens of thousands of farmers have camped near the border of New Delhi since November 27 to protest the new laws, blocking most of the entry points to the national capital.

The farmers have said they will not return home until the laws are repealed.

The Indian government issued an advisory to all states and union territories to boost security. Thousands of extra police personnel have been deployed in Delhi and neighboring states where farmers have been protesting for nearly two weeks.

VIDEO India: Farmers demand repeal of agricultural market reforms


What are the laws they are protesting?

In September, India's parliament passed three controversial agriculture bills aimed at liberalizing the country's farm sector. They were subsequently signed into law, sparking farmers' protests across the country.

The government argued that the new laws will give freedom to farmers to sell their produce outside regulated markets and enter into contracts with buyers at a pre-agreed price.

The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) insists that the laws will fetch better prices and free farmers from traditional middlemen who dominate the trade. The government hopes that its new policy will double farmers' income by 2022.

Farmers' associations say the legislation does not guarantee the acquisition of farm produce through state-run organizations that guarantee a minimum support price (MSP), thus leaving them at the mercy of corporations that are now expected to enter the country's troubled farming sector.

"We are fighting for our rights. We won't rest until we reach the capital and force the government to abolish these black laws,'' said Majhinder Singh Dhaliwal, a farmers' leader.

Opposition parties and even some allies of Prime Minister Narendra Modi have called the laws anti-farmer and pro-corporation and called on the government to accept the farmers' demand to roll them back.

Protesters from the Left Front political party blocked railways in Kolkata

Domestic and international support for farmers

More than 15 opposition parties and many non-BJP-ruled state governments have backed the strikes. The government has accused Congress, the main opposition party, of opportunism.

Union Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said Congress supported privatizing the agricultural sector but is now opposing it to gain favor with the farmers, an influential voting group.

The farmers have also received support internationally. Several US lawmakers have voiced their support for the ongoing protests.

"I stand in solidarity with the Punjabi farmers in India protesting for their livelihoods and protection from misguided, manipulative government regulations," Congressman Doug LaMalfa said on Monday.

"Punjabi farmers must be allowed to protest peacefully against their government without fear of violence," the Republican said in a tweet.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau also reiterated his support of Indian farmers last week.

Trudeau released a Twitter video calling the police crackdown on the farmer protests "concerning" and saying they should be allowed to stage peaceful protests.

"Canada will always stand up for the right of peaceful protests anywhere around the world. And we are pleased to see moves towards de-escalation and dialogue," he told reporters in Ottawa.




INDIAN FARMERS CONTINUE PROTEST AGAINST NEW DELHI
Talks inconclusive
Farmers from the northern state of Punjab sit in protest at the border between Delhi and Haryana amid an ongoing deadlock with the national government.
PHOTOS 12345678

India’s farmers launch nationwide shutdown against new agricultural reform laws

Farmers have vowed to block major roads and rail lines across the country and have been given support by railway workers, truck drivers and teachers

They want laws they say will force produce prices down to be repealed, but which the government insist are necessary for agriculture’s long-term future


Agence France-Presse in New Delhi
Published:  8 Dec, 2020

Indian farmers threaten weeks of protests as talks with government continue

Indian farmers who have been blockading New Delhi on Tuesday launched a one-day, nationwide general strike to push their demands for the government to repeal reform laws opening up trade in agricultural produce.

Tens of thousands of farmers have been camped on the outskirts of the capital since November 27 

in protest at the laws in what has become one of the biggest challenges to the Hindu nationalist government since it won a second landslide election in 2019.

Farmers have vowed to block major roads and rail lines across the country for several hours and have been given support by railway workers, truck drivers, teachers and other unions.

Farmers react after police tried to stop them from entering New Delhi to protest against new farm laws on Monday. Photo: EPA


Authorities have put thousands of extra police on the streets in Delhi and boosted security in the rest of the country in a bid to head off any trouble.

Five rounds of talks have failed to narrow differences between farmers and ministers. The growing numbers of farmers and their supporters camped outside the capital say they will not go home until the laws are repealed.

The laws will allow farmers to sell their produce on the open market – including to supermarket chains – instead of being forced to sell through state-run organisations that guarantee a minimum price.

Farmers carry crops after harvesting a field on the outskirts of Kolkata earlier this month. The government insists reforms are necessary to give Indian agriculture a long-term future. Photo: AFP

Farmers say the industry will be taken over by major firms who will force prices down. The government insists the changes are necessary to give agriculture – still the backbone of the Indian economy – a long-term future.

The protests have already caused price rises for fruit and vegetables in Delhi because supplies are restricted.

Rakesh Tikait, a protest leader, said that people should not travel during the shutdown and all stores should close.

Thousands of Indian farmers protest against market reforms as government talks fail to ease anger

Balbir Singh Rajewal, another leader, said: “We want nothing less than a withdrawal of the new farm laws.”

The main opposition Congress party and about 15 other political groupings are backing the protest but the government has accused them of opportunism, rejecting measures that they had called for when in power.

The farmers are strongest in the north of the country, but even the government in the southern state of Karnataka suspended online school lessons for the day to show support.

Indian farmers vs Modi: protesters ‘ready to die’ in winter of discontent
4 Dec 2020


Top athletes including wrestler Kartar Singh, who won gold medals at the Asian Games in 1978 and 1986, said they would return national awards in protest at the laws.

Singh alongside hockey player Gurmail Singh – gold medallist at the 1980 Moscow Olympics – and former women’s hockey captain Rajbir Kaur tried to march on the presidential palace on Monday to hand back awards but were stopped by police.

A new round of talks on the disputed laws are to be held on Wednesday.


Farmers shout slogans next to a police barricade amid foggy condition during a nationwide general strike to protest against the recent agricultural reforms at the Delhi-Haryana state border in Singhu on December 8, 2020. (AFP)



“We die or we win.”

India’s agriculture reforms ‘will reduce us to slaves’, say protesting farmers

Tens of thousands of Indian farmers are protesting against new laws to overhaul and deregulate the agriculture sector and remove middlemen

But farmers are digging in, saying the Narendra Modi government’s reforms are a ‘death warrant’ and they are resolute about maintaining a blockade

Agence France-Presse
Published: 7 Dec, 2020


Sandeep Singh, a farmer from the northern Indian state of Punjab, listens to speakers during a rally along a road blocked by police to stop farmers from marching to New Delhi to protest against agricultural reforms. Photo: AFP

Behind concertina wire and trucks blockading a major highway into
India’s capital, tens of thousands of farmers are camping out in the bitter winter cold as they protest against agriculture reforms they fear could destroy their livelihood.

Layers of hay, mattresses and blankets are used as bedding inside the tractors and trucks, and on the road, while six months’ worth of food is piled up in trailers – signs that the farmers are resolute about maintaining the blockade until Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government reverses course.

Pro-farmers slogans blare out from speakers at the blockade, with some protesters standing on tractors brandishing swords and spears.

“These laws are death warrants for the farmers,” said Sandeep Singh, a farmer from Ludhiana district in northern Punjab state – a major agrarian region. “This [blockade] is the Berlin Wall but even if we have to protest for a year or two or have to face bullets, we won’t leave this site until the laws are repealed.”

Indian farmers vs Modi: protesters ‘ready to die’ in winter of discontent
4 Dec 2020


At the heart of the dispute are new laws that the government says will overhaul the flailing sector by deregulating agriculture and removing state middlemen.

But farmers believe the changes could instead tilt the power balance towards large corporations. Both sides have refused to budge despite several rounds of talks.

“We do not trust the government at all. Every law they have brought previously has turned to be a disaster … They want to disempower farmers and hand over our land and lives to big companies,” Singh said.

The blockade kicked off when farmers marched from Punjab towards New Delhi on November 26, sparking violent clashes with police.


Singh, 65, one of the first demonstrators, has been joined by tens of thousands of his fellow mostly Sikh farmers.


He and a dozen others drove six tractors carrying rations to the border between Delhi and Haryana state, which lies between the capital and Punjab.

Singh supervises one of the scores of makeshift kitchens where the food is cooked. For bathing, some use buckets filled with water and hosepipes connected to tankers.

The farmers, wearing brightly coloured turbans, sit cross-legged in a long line along the highway as a volunteer serves them meals prepared in huge pots.

Trudeau wades in on Indian farmers’ protests, sparking debate
3 Dec 2020


At night, Singh retreats to his tractor where he updates his family back home on WhatsApp about the latest news from the campaign backed by his entire village.

“My son encouraged me to join the protests. This is a do-or-die situation for us. I am here for my future generations,” said Singh, who owes two hectares (five acres) of farmland.

Camps distributing medicines and masks have also popped up on the nearly 2km (1.2-mile) Delhi-northern India border.

Farmers gather along a road blocked by police to stop them from marching to New Delhi to protest against the central government's recent agricultural reforms. Photo: AFP

Shuvaik Singh has been camping at the site from day one when police fired tear gas and water cannon on protesters.

The 75-year-old, who owns seven acres of semi-parched land in Punjab’s Patiala district, was hit by cold water from the cannon. But he is not deterred.


“We have seen droughts and famine but that never worries us. Bullets and water cannons won’t stop us either,” Singh said as he gripped a modified walking stick with a crescent-shaped axe.


“These laws will reduce us to slaves, which is unacceptable. If needed I will use my weapon but won’t go back without the laws being rolled back. How will I face my family?” he asked.

“We die or we win.”


INDIA
Bharat Bandh (GENERAL STRIKE) TODAY
 Here's All You Need To Know
Bharatiya Kisan Union Spokesperson Rakesh Tikait said that the protest is to show that the farmers don't support some of the policies of the government.

Outlook Web Bureau 07 December 2020

PTI
Farmers protesting against the Centre’s new farm laws on Friday announced the Bharat Bandh on December 8 after the fifth round of talks between the government and the farmer representatives ended in a deadlock.

Bharatiya Kisan Union Spokesperson Rakesh Tikait said that the protest is to show that the farmers don't support some of the policies of the government.

As the farmer unions have suggested that the protests might intensify if the government does not accept their demand, here everything you need to know:



- There will be complete 'Bharat bandh' on Tuesday, farmer leader Balbir Singh Rajewal tells press conference. He adds, "Government will have to accept our demands, we want nothing less than a withdrawal of new farm laws."

- Bharat Bandh is from 11 am to 3 pm.

- Delhi commuters might face problems as some auto and taxi unions in the city have decided to join 'Bharat Bandh'. However, many other unions have decided to continue normal service despite their support to the demand raised by the farmers.

- On Monday, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal visited the Singhu border, where thousands of farmers are protesting against the Centre's new farm laws, and checked arrangements made for them by the city government.



- The visit comes a day after the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) extended its support to the 'Bharat Bandh' called by farmers' organisations.

- Members of farmers' unions will block national highways and occupy toll plazas, said Harinder Singh Lakhowal, general secretary of Bharatiya Kisan Union.

- Supply truck movement could be hit in north India, including Rajasthan, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, as at least 51 trade and transport unions have come out in farmers' support.

- The Bandh is likely to be most well-observed in Punjab, which has extended full support. Sit-in protests are likely in Karnataka, Maharashtra, West Bengal, Telangana and northeastern states of Tripura and Assam, besides others.

- Banking operations are expected to be hit as several bank unions have expressed their solidarity with farmers.

#BharatBandh: 'We Are Farmers, Not Politicians'

Angry farmers gathered at the borders of Delhi express their disgust with politicians, and pledge not to stop their agitation till their demands are met.

Delhi NGO Provides Free Wifi To Protesting Farmers On Delhi-Haryana Border

Some were seen making a video call while others used the Internet connectivity to browse web and get the latest news updates

PTI 07 December 2020
Follow Outlook India On News

Farmers during their protest against the Centre's new farm laws, 
at Singhu border in New Delhi

Suresh K Pandey


Driven by a desire to offer protesting farmers a platform to "tell their stories of resistance" in their own words and help them stay connected with their families back home, a city-based NGO has provided free WiFi links to them on both sides of a Delhi-Haryana border point.

On the Delhi side, a dedicated router with a decent Internet speed has been installed. On the Haryana side, portable systems were being used to help farmers get better online connectivity, which are also being used by their children for virtual classes.

"We started the facility of free WiFi about five days ago. We had originally come here to distribute food and other supplies. But, we realised that while the farmers had sufficient supplies, it was mobile connectivity which was getting difficult," said Abhishek Jain, whose NGO provided the WiFi connectivity.

The WiFi username has been scribbled on cardboards and hung on a few posts holding the main protest shamiana on the Delhi side of the Singhu border. There is no password, so anyone can log in, he added.

A farmer from Punjab was seen making a video call on his smart phone while a few others used the Internet connectivity to browse the web and see the latest news updates and post live updates from the protest site.

"While there is media coverage of the issue, we felt the stories of struggle and resistance of farmers should be told in their own words too. These farmers, who feed our country, are on the streets. India and the rest of the world need to hear their voices, undiluted, unedited, unadulterated," Jain told PTI.

The 25-year-old social worker from Vasant Vihar in south Delhi, said, he has a degree in civil engineering and an MBA, but something drove him to "work for and give back to the society, as a youngster".

"My grandfather was born in Panipat, not far from the Singhu Border. He moved to Delhi about 70 years ago. It was he and his stories which inspired me to take up social work, even though my friend will sometimes ask why was I wasting my MBA on social causes," he said.

Jain founded Abhishek Janshakti Foundation, about a year ago, which he says has grown to a team of about 30 members, mostly college and university students. At the protest site, the uniformed volunteers of the NGO were seen helping people get connected to the free WiFi.

"On the Haryana side, we have installed a portable Wi-Fi system, and children of the farmers are using it too for their online classes.

"Our objective was easy providing connectivity to help farmers express themselves through social media and stay connected to their families. We should listen to farmers as India is still an agriculture dominant country. In a democracy, their voices should matter," said Subir Dass, one of the volunteers.

The NGO members were initially collecting testimonies of various farmers, but now many have started "voicing their words" on their own, the young social worker said.

"Some of the farmers opened Facebook pages to live stream the events unfolding... I myself have helped a few of them open Facebook pages. A 200 Mbps line via a dedicated dish makes the Internet speed quite viable. The speed goes down a bit when more people get linked to it," he said.

At the protest site, fiery speeches, fluttering flags of the Bharat Kisan Union and other peasant bodies, and spirited 'langars' that invited everyone to join in, added to the charged atmosphere.

Some of the farmers who have gathered here, said on the Haryana side solar panels have been installed on tractor-trolleys, making a makeshift unit to recharge mobile phones.

"They are calling it 'mobile langar' of sorts. I've heard about it, but it is a bit far from the main protest site," Jain said.


The social worker, who visits the protest site every day, rued that in a country like India, "farmers either commit suicide or have to leave their farms behind to fight for their rights".

WHO opposes mandatory COVID-19 vaccines

“There’s too much of a gap between the rhetoric and the reality.”

A nurse administers CoronaVac, Sinovac's potential vaccine
 against COVID-19, to a volunteer at Emilio Ribas Institute in 
Sao Paulo in July.

GENEVA – The World Health Organization said Monday that persuading people on the merits of a COVID-19 vaccine would be far more effective than trying to make the jabs mandatory.

The WHO said it would be down to individual countries as to how they want to conduct their vaccination campaigns against the coronavirus pandemic.

But the U.N. health agency insisted making it mandatory to get immunized against the disease would be the wrong road to take, adding there were examples in the past of mandating vaccines use only to see it backfire with greater opposition to them.

“I don’t think that mandates are the direction to go in here, especially for these vaccines,” Kate O’Brien, director of the WHO’s immunization department, told a virtual news conference.

“It is a much better position to actually encourage and facilitate the vaccination without those kinds of requirements.

“I don’t think we envision any countries creating a mandate for vaccination.”

O’Brien said there may be certain hospital professions in which being vaccinated might be required or highly recommended for staff and patient safety.

But WHO experts admitted there was a battle to be fought to convince the general public to take the vaccines as they become available.

“The vaccine story is a good news story. It is the victory of human endeavor, potentially, over a microbial adversary,” said the organization’s emergencies director Michael Ryan.

“We need to convince people and we need to persuade.”

As for making vaccines mandatory, he said: “I think all of us who work in public health would rather avoid that as a means for getting people vaccinated.

“We are much better served to present people with the data and the benefits and let people make up their own minds.

“There are certain circumstances … where I would believe that the only responsible thing would be to be vaccinated,” he added.

According to the WHO’s overview of different candidate vaccines, 51 have entered human trials, 13 of which have reached final-stage mass testing.

A further 163 candidate vaccines are being developed in laboratories with a view to eventual human testing.

The world-first rollout of the Pfizer vaccine is due to begin in Britain on Tuesday.

As countries begin deploying vaccines in the coming weeks and months, WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus urged them to prioritize those most in need.

“These are not easy decisions,” he said, setting out the WHO guidelines.

Tedros said health workers at high risk of infection were a top priority, plus people at the highest risk of serious disease or death due to their age — thereby easing the pressure on health systems.

He said they should later be followed by people with a higher risk of severe disease due to underlying conditions, and marginalized groups at higher risk.

The WHO’s ACT-Accelerator mechanism, pooling risk and reward among countries rich and poor, is a global attempt to speed up the development of COVID-19 vaccines, tests and treatments, and purchase and distribute them evenly regardless of wealth.

However, the program needs $4.3 billion urgently, with a further $23.9 billion required in 2021.

“What we need now globally is not to enter the land of empty promises in terms of supporting the ACT-Accelerator,” said Ryan, urging wealthy donors to stump up.

“The means to do this allocation fairly and equitably is there. But what’s not in place is the financing to make that happen in 2021.

“There’s too much of a gap between the rhetoric and the reality.”
Imagine: John Lennon shot on his doorstep 40 years ago

Published on December 5, 2020
By Agence France-Presse
Former Beatle John Lennon, giving the peace sign, and his wife, Yoko Ono, arrive for a hearing on their deportation case at U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service office in lower Manhattan, May 12, 1972. (Newsweek)

Late on a mild December evening in 1980, a young man with a revolver shot John Lennon four times in the back as the singer arrived home from a recording studio with his wife, Yoko Ono.

Police found his killer reading a book as he waited for them to arrest him outside the Dakota apartment building in midtown Manhattan.

Lennon was rushed to hospital on the back seat of a police car but “did not have the slightest chance of surviving” despite receiving several blood transfusions, a doctor told reporters.

An AFP breaking news dispatch on December 8 read: “Former Beatle John Lennon was assassinated in front of his home in New York.”

It was the start of a flood of media coverage that would rival the reach of the world-famous singer, who was just 40 years old.

– Fateful autograph –

Mark Chapman, then 25, had travelled from Hawaii and had got Lennon to sign his copy of the British singer’s latest album, “Double Fantasy”, earlier that day as Lennon left the building.

“I saw the photo where he signed the autograph. It was flashed on TV again and again,” Yoko Ono would write to fans a month later in an ad she took out in major newspapers across the country.

“Somehow that photo was harder for me to look at than the death photo. John was in a hurry that afternoon. He did not have to give his autograph but he did, while the man watched him, the man who was to betray John later.”

Years later from a prison cell, Chapman, an evangelical Christian, told a journalist he was “angry at (Lennon) for saying (in the song “God”) that he didn’t believe in God, that he just believed in him and Yoko, and that he didn’t believe in the Beatles”.

Lennon’s quip that the Beatles were “more popular than Jesus” also irked him.

Chapman was deemed competent to stand trial and was sentenced to life in prison, where he remains. His 12th parole hearing is set for 2022.

– ‘Great tragedy’ –

Then US president-elect Ronald Reagan — who would later survive an assassination attempt himself — called the killing a “great tragedy” as thousands of mourners gathered outside the building where Lennon had lived with Ono and their son Sean.

Ono announced there would be no public funeral. Instead she sent word to fans singing outside her window to gather at an amphitheatre in nearby Central Park that Sunday to honour her late husband.

On December 14, about 200,000 people braved the New York cold to pay tribute to Lennon with all of the city’s radio stations going silent for 10 minutes.

Across the United States, tens of thousands flocked to “parks, squares, parking lots or theatres — even the natural Red Rocks amphitheatre in the heart of the Rocky mountains, where the Beatles had performed in 1964”, said the AFP report at the time.

Millions more joined in around the world.

– Moscow mourns –

In Moscow, where Beatles albums had been banned, with their recordings circulating on the black market, tributes went on for days. Police finally moved to disperse hundreds of young people who had gathered near the university with portraits of Lennon.

There was a similar crackdown on Beatles fans in Prague.

“You would have to go back to the tragic death of John Kennedy or Dr Martin Luther King Jr in the 60s to find a reaction like this in the wake of a celebrity,” said an AFP account of the events.

Emotions were equally high in Britain, especially in Lennon’s hometown of Liverpool. Some 20,000 people sang “Give Peace a Chance” at the end of a tribute concert.

There was crying and fainting reminiscent of scenes from overwrought audiences at the height of Beatlemania, AFP reported.

“John Lennon is not dead. As long as his music lives he can’t die,” a Beatles impersonator told the Liverpool crowd.

– Relics –

Decades after his death, Lennon’s legacy continues to resurface as objects linked to him come up for auction.

The piano he used to compose “Imagine” was sold in 2000 in London for 2.45 million euros, and one of his guitars went for $2 million in the United States in 2015.

Other prized relics include a pair of his round sunglasses purchased for £137,500 in 2019 and a lock of his hair which sold for $35,000 in Texas in 2016.

© 2020 AFP