Vietnam approves China's Sinopharm vaccine

MANAN VATSYAYANA / AFP

Vietnam has approved China's Sinopharm vaccine for use against COVID-19, state media reported on Friday.

It's the third shot to be endorsed in the Southeast Asian country that is tackling a new outbreak of infections.

The decision to approve the Sinopharm vaccine was issued by the health ministry, the official Vietnam News Agency reported.

Vietnam has previously approved the AstraZeneca vaccine and Russia's Sputnik V.

The country is trying to accelerate its vaccine procurement drive to tackle a more stubborn wave of infections, even though its overall case load and fatality numbers remain relatively low.

Minister of Health Nguyen Thanh Long said on Wednesday Vietnam was nearing its target of acquiring 150 million doses of vaccines this year to inoculate 75% of its 98 million population.

The country has taken delivery of nearly 2.9 million doses of coronavirus vaccine so far, mostly AstraZeneca shots and about one million have been administered.

Vietnam has recorded 49 deaths and just 8,115 cases overall, although nearly 60% of infections were in the past month.

The World Health Organisation on Friday confirmed that a coronavirus mutation that Vietnamese authorities thought was a combination of the Indian and UK variants did not appear to be a new variant or hybrid.

"Based on evidence to date, this is not a new variant nor a hybrid variant but an additional mutation found in the Delta variant," said Kidong Park, the WHO's representative in Vietnam, referring to the Delta variant first identified in India.

"It is premature, at this stage, to conclude on the characteristics of this additional mutation that occurred in the Delta variant," Park added in an emailed statement.

More from International News

  • UN: 70% of Gaza fatalities women and children

    The UN Human Rights Office said on Friday nearly 70 per cent of the fatalities it has verified in the Gaza war were women and children, and condemned what it called a systematic violation of the fundamental principles of international humanitarian law.

  • Britain names Jonathan Powell as national security adviser

    Britain on Friday named Jonathan Powell, who was chief of staff to former prime minister Tony Blair, as its national security adviser.

  • Indonesian volcano spews ash 10 km high

    Indonesia's Mount Lewotobi Laki-laki erupted several times on Friday, belching volcanic ash that rose up to 10 km (32,800 ft) into the sky, officials said, following a big eruption on Sunday night that killed nine people.

  • Israeli PM directs two rescue planes to Amsterdam

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has directed two rescue planes to Amsterdam after being informed of "a very violent incident" targeting Israeli citizens, his office said on Friday.

Blogs