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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Lorna Hughes

World could be 'adequately' vaccinated by mid-2022 as UK gives away first excess jabs

The UK will send its first batch of excess Covid vaccines overseas this week - with the Foreign Secretary saying it could mean the world will be “adequately vaccinated” by mid-2022.

Dominic Raab confirmed on Wednesday that the UK will ship its first batch of excess coronavirus vaccines to “vulnerable” nations and Commonwealth allies this week.

The UK made a pledge to donate 100 million of its excess vaccine doses to poorer nations at the G7 summit in Cornwall in June.

Mr Raab said it would make the country “safer” as a result, adding: "We are safer when the rest of the world is safer.”

He told Sky News: “At the start of the pandemic, when we did our vaccine programme, we secured multiple sources and supplies and overall the volume of vaccines to make sure we had security of supply.

“We have already given a huge amount through Covax, through the financing of Covax, but we can now, from domestic supply, start to give 100 million, which will get the world vaccinated.

“We have got moral reasons for doing that. You look at Jamaica, Laos, Cambodia, some of the countries – Kenya – we are vaccinating and we feel a sense of moral responsibility.

“But we also know, bluntly, that we are safer when the rest of the world is safer, whether it is for people going on holiday or whether it is just the ordinary course of international trade that we need and we rely on.”

He added: “The reason we want to do that is we want to get the world adequately vaccinated by the middle of next year rather than, on current trajectory, the end of 2024.

“Think about what that means, not just for us but for those countries: massive difference – that is why we are doing what we are doing.”

The Foreign Secretary visited an AstraZeneca manufacturing site in Oxford on Wednesday to announce that the first despatch of excess UK doses will be making their way to poorer nations this week – with five million to be distributed via the World Health Organisation’s Covax scheme and another four million bilaterally.

Indonesia will receive 600,000 doses of those being handed out bilaterally, 300,000 will be sent to Jamaica and 817,000 are to be transported to Kenya, among other countries, the Foreign Office said.

Ahead of the G7 summit in June, the Government had faced calls to start distributing excess vaccines abroad, including from scientific advisers and the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Coronavirus.

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