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Cvid-19: South Africa to host vaccine tech transfer hub

GENEVA, June 22 (NNN-AGENCIES) — South Africa will host the continent’s

first Covid-19 vaccine production facility, as President Cyril Ramaphosa said

Monday Africa now understood that doses would “never come” from elsewhere in

time to save lives.

Ramaphosa joined the World Health Organization (WHO) and French President

Emmanuel Macron in announcing the new hub for Messenger RNA coronavirus

vaccine technology.

But as the project will take time to get off the ground, no vaccines are

expected from it until next year.

At tech transfer hubs, the technology is established at industrial scale,

while interested manufacturers can receive training and any necessary

licences to the technology.

“The ability to manufacture vaccines, medicines and other health-related

commodities will help to put Africa on a path to self-determination,”

Ramaphosa told a WHO virtual press conference via video-link.

“It’s been shown now that we just cannot continue to rely on vaccines that

are made outside of Africa because they never come. They never arrive on time

and people continue to die.”

The hub is seen by the Geneva-based WHO as a way to combat the vast

inequality in access to vaccines between the world’s wealthiest and poorest

nations.

WHO chief scientist Soumya Swaminathan said it could take nine to 12 months

before Covid-19 vaccines could be produced in South Africa using tested and

approved processes.

Under the tech transfer hub system, the WHO and its partners bring in the

production know-how, quality control and necessary licences to enable a rapid

roll-out.

At the South African hub, the bio-pharmaceutical company Biovac will act as

developer; the Afrigen biotechnology firm will be the manufacturer; and a

consortium of universities will provide the scientific know-how.

Messenger RNA genetic technology — as used in the Pfizer-BioNTech and

Moderna coronavirus jabs — trains the body to reproduce spike proteins

similar to those found on the coronavirus. When exposed to the real virus

later, the body recognises the spike proteins and is able to fight them off.

The WHO said it would “continue its assessment of potential mRNA technology

donors and will launch subsequent calls for other technologies, such as viral

vectors and proteins, in coming months”.

Kate Stegeman of Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said that “Moderna and

Pfizer/BioNTech must immediately share their mRNA technology with the hub so

that many more mRNA vaccines can be produced independently by manufacturers

in South Africa and more broadly on the African continent”.

During a visit to South Africa last month, Macron said he was pushing for

the faster transfer of technology to allow poorer countries to start

manufacturing their own Covid-19 jabs.

It was a “great day for Africa”, said Macron.

“Each continent must be able to develop and produce its own vaccines, its

own medicines,” he added.

“Action for global public goods is the fight that this century must uphold

and the fight that cannot wait.”

South Africa accounts for more than 35 percent of Africa’s total recorded

Covid-19 cases, and is currently suffering a third wave of infections.

South Africa, along with India, has been pushing for a temporary waiver of

vaccines’ intellectual property rights in order to speed up production.

More than 2.6 billion doses of Covid-19 vaccines have been injected in at

least 216 territories around the world.

In the highest-income countries, accounting for 16 percent of the global

population, 74 doses have been injected per 100 inhabitants.

That figure stands at just three doses per 100 people in Africa.

Source: NAM NEWS NETWORK

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