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Calvin Cheng: Sinovac = A failed gamble by the Singapore government

If you're willing to be conned and are very cheerful about it... technically is it being conned? You are in bliss. It's like being raped but asking the rapist for a second round. :wink:

Anyway, the money spent on Sinovac vaccines is peanuts compared to the money squandered on Ant Group's IPO. No worries Sinkies: you, your children and your grandchildren will pay and pay back the money in no time. :cool:
Simple solution : just resell to Indonesia at a cheaper price. Better than a total loss. Because no one wants that stuff injected into us.
 
Sinovac photo op. :biggrin:

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Jin power, check by naked eyes ? Lol 好眼光!
 
https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...e-testing-requirements-lawrence-wong-13912834

With only "very early stage clinical information" available, the committee and experts narrowed down the selections to 35 vaccine candidates. They eventually decided on the three vaccines - Moderna, Pfizer-BioNTech and Sinovac - based on safety and effectiveness based on the preliminary data that was available then, he added.

“And that's the three that we have made advanced purchases for, with the aim of building a diversified portfolio of vaccines that will be safe and effective for use in Singapore,” said Mr Wong.

When asked by Talking Point host Steve Chia if this approach by Singapore could be characterised as "hedging (its) chances", Mr Wong replied: "Very much so."

According to the Economic Development Board (EDB), the vaccine panel made its first advance purchase agreement with Moderna in June, securing it with a downpayment. In August, it bought the Sinovac vaccine and was in advance talks with Pfizer-BioNTech.

Singapore’s Health Sciences Authority (HSA) eventually approved the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine first. Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong announced in a televised address on Dec 15, 2020 that the first shipment would arrive by the end of December, with other vaccines expected in the coming months.

Buying vaccines without HSA approval... bold move. :thumbsup:
 
u always never fail to be on the lookout for income opportunity :biggrin:
How you know ah? I have ready buyers for this stuff in Jakarta. Only thing is, need to give them 30 months terms, not 30 days.:biggrin:
 
Singapore is a small country and we need to pay ransom to China and we have no choice. I suggest government to buy 1 million Sinovac vaccine and pay the money to Chinese communist and later destroy them in Jurong island. No choice le
Brilliant idea!
 
Since it's a calculated risk, the PAP should just try the vaccine on the CECA Nehs first. Let the Ah Nehs become the guinea pigs.
 
Hospitals in South Korea struggle to find beds for thousands of infected patients.

KNN my uncle wonder why hospitals need to find a bed for a patient before they can start treatment process or have loctors coming to the patient for assessment KNN
 
Who will protect Singapore assets at Suzhou if we don’t buy Sinovac ? I still want my cpf you know.

for a moment I thought Sinkiestan sold SIP to PRC at a loss or something, totally unprofittable when PRC modelled SIP2 after SIP was completed, lock stock and barrel.
 
Very foolish of the PAP to even consider ordering from the CCP. we are talking about medicine here, not canned food or vegetables.

Canned food and vegetables from CCP is even more likely to cause harm than the vaccine.


telegraph.co.uk

Top 10 Chinese Food Scandals
By Peter Foster 26 April 2011 • 23:00 pm

4-5 minutes


In 2008 six babes were killed and 300,000 were left sickened after consuming infant formula contaminated with the industrial chemical melamine. The scandal, which was hushed up for several months to avoid embarrassment during the Olympic Games, caused outrage in China and smashed public confidence in the government and its ability to regulate the food industry.

Police in the northeastern city of Shenyang seized 40 tons of beans-prouts in April 2011. The tainted vegetables had been treated with sodium nitrite and urea, as well as antibiotics and a plant hormone called 6-benzyladenine. The chemicals were used to make them grow faster and look ‘shinier’ in the market stalls. 12 people were arrested.

Pesticide-drenched ‘yard-long’ beans

More than 3.5 tons of “yard-long” green beans contaminated with banned pesticide isocarbophos, were destroyed after being discovered on sale in the central city of Wuhan in March 2010. The beans had come from the southern city of Sanya, and allegations of another attempted cover-up followed after the Sanya agricultural law enforcement bureau said it was “inconsiderate” of Wuhan authorities to publicise the case.
In February 2011 reports emerged of another milk contamination scandal, this time using leather-hydrolyzed protein which, like melamine, appears to boost the protein-content of milk, thereby enhancing its value. The problem had been detected as early as March 2009 reported the official China Daily newspaper reported Friday. China announced this month it was closing almost half of its dairies in a bid to clean up the industry.

After reports that much of China’s rice crop was contaminated with heavy metals, health authorities in Shenzhen, southern China tested 696 samples of food made with flour, including dumplings and steamed buns. Nearly one third (28pc) were found to have levels of aluminium above national standards, the Shenzhen Standard reported. The contamination was blamed on excessive use of baking powder containing the metal.
Reports and photographs surfaced last month showing pork that glowed an eerie, iridescent blue when the kitchen lights were turned off. Online users dubbed it “Avatar” meat and remained sceptical despite reassurances from the Shanghai Health Supervision Department which said the pork that has been contaminated by a phosphorescent bacteria and was still safe eat if well-cooked.

China has fought a long-running battle with the use of the steroid clenbuterol in pork production. Known as ‘lean meat powder’, it can cause dizziness, heart palpitations, diarrhoea and profuse sweating. The most recent case occurred last March in a stock market-listed pork producer, but China has acknowledged 18 outbreaks of food-related clenbuterol poisoning between 1998 and 2007, according to a report on the Shanghai Food Safety website.

In April 2010 more than 7m toxic disposable food containers were seized in eastern province of Jiangxi. Although banned in 1999, the foam-boxes are still in widespread use in China, releasing toxic elements when warmed by food. The chemicals have the potential to damage livers, kidneys and reproductive organs.

An undercover investigation by a professor from Wuhan Polytechnic University in March 2010 estimated that one in 10 of all meals in China were cooked using recycled oil, often scavenged from the drains beneath restaurants. The State Food and Drug Administration issued a nationwide emergency ordering an investigation into the scandal of the so-called ‘sewer’ oil, which further dented public confidence in the food industry.

Research published in February claimed that up to 10 per cent of rice sold in China was contaminated with heavy metals, including cadmium. Data collected by Nanjing Agricultural University found that the problem was most acute in Southern provinces, where in some areas 60 per cent of samples were contaminated, some with up to five times the legal limit.
 
50% efficiency haha... so it’s as good as not taking the vaccine ?

It's 'free' so you are not supposed to look a gift horse in the mouth. :biggrin:

But if you get complications from receiving a China vaccine, that's your own problem. :cool:
 
It's 'free' so you are not supposed to look a gift horse in the mouth. :biggrin:

But if you get complications from receiving a China vaccine, that's your own problem. :cool:

I avoid canned food from China and you expect me to submit to their vaccine???
 
I avoid canned food from China and you expect me to submit to their vaccine???

You know that saying: once we've established that you are a prostitute, all that remains is the negotiation of the price.

Canned food, masks, vaccines... what difference at this point does it make? :wink:

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