Philippines negotiating for 178m Covid vaccine doses

Philippines negotiating for 178m Covid vaccine doses

FILE PHOTO: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, wearing a face mask, presides over a meeting with members of the inter-Agency Task Force on the Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) in Malacanang Palace in Manila, April 8, 2020. (Photo by TOTO LOZANO / PRESIDENTIAL PHOTO DIVISION / AFP)
FILE PHOTO: Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, wearing a face mask, presides over a meeting with members of the inter-Agency Task Force on the Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) in Malacanang Palace in Manila, April 8, 2020. (Photo by TOTO LOZANO / PRESIDENTIAL PHOTO DIVISION / AFP)

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte pledged to keep the economy afloat amid the coronavirus pandemic as his administration raced to secure vaccines enough for most of its adult population.

“We are sinking deeper and deeper,” Duterte said in a live-streamed briefing on Monday night. “We are trying our very best to keep us afloat.” The Southeast Asian nation’s gross domestic product contracted by 9.5% in 2020, the most since 1946.

The Philippines, which has the second-highest number of coronavirus infections in the region, is negotiating for 178 million coronavirus vaccine doses, enough to inoculate 92 million people, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez said in the same briefing.

The amount is more than the target of 148 million doses this year as it takes into account delays in order delivery, Dominguez said. The government has secured $1.4 billion of funding from multilateral agencies, he said.

About 3 million doses will arrive in February and the bulk in the third and fourth quarters, said Carlito Galvez, who leads the vaccination programme, adding the government has signed term sheets with five manufacturers to lock in supply for about 108 million doses.

The government will prioritise health care workers and uniformed personnel this quarter, and economic frontliners such as drivers and food services personnel in the second quarter. The Philippines has more than 520,000 coronavirus cases as of Feb 1.

Duterte said the vaccine race has turned into a competition among the highest bidders. It’s not easy for Southeast Asian nations to secure shots because they are “not as really as powerful as” the European Union, he said.

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