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Covid-19 vaccine - which countries have tried to bought, bully or intimidate SG leh?

LITTLEREDDOT

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
"There will be pressure on us, there will be push and pulls, but we must conduct this just like another example of foreign policy, in a principled manner," Vivian Balakrishnan

Which country tried to force SG to buy their vaccine? China? India?
Is this why SG bought the Sinovac vaccine even before MoH approves the vaccine?


S'pore cannot be bought, bullied or intimidated into approving any Covid-19 vaccine, says Vivian
Dr Vivian Balakrishnan said Singapore will be an important reference customer when it comes to vaccines.

Dr Vivian Balakrishnan said Singapore will be an important reference customer when it comes to vaccines.
ST PHOTO: KEVIN LIM
yuesin.png

Yuen Sin

1 MAR 2021

SINGAPORE - Singapore will make decisions regarding the approval of vaccines on the basis of science and healthcare needs, and will not be pressured when it comes to decisions on such matters, Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan told Parliament on Monday (March 1).

"We cannot be bought, we cannot be bullied, we cannot be intimidated into either approving or disapproving any vaccine," said Dr Balakrishnan, who was speaking during the debate on the Foreign Ministry's budget.

"There will be pressure on us, there will be push and pulls, but we must conduct this just like another example of foreign policy, in a principled manner," he said in response to Workers' Party chairman Sylvia Lim (Aljunied GRC), who had noted that the distribution patterns of Covid-19 vaccines around the world reflected a certain power play along traditional alliances.

Dr Balakrishnan said Singapore will be an important reference customer when it comes to vaccines, precisely because the world knows that the country bases its decisions on science and healthcare needs, as opposed to other factors.

Ms Lim had also asked if countries joining the Covid-19 Vaccine Global Access (Covax) facility face any restrictions on reaching bilateral arrangements for Covid-19 vaccine purchases, and whether such bilateral arrangements will pose an obstacle to the success of the Covax programme, which aims to procure, equitably allocate and deliver two billion doses of Covid-19 vaccines by the end of this year.

Dr Balakrishnan explained that under Covax's global risk-sharing mechanism, countries with more resources, including Singapore, would make advance market commitments for the vaccines.

This would incentivise multiple pharmaceutical companies to develop vaccines in a timely manner, despite the significant business risk. "If there wasn't such a facility to pool risk and therefore incentivise this simultaneous rapid development of vaccines, we wouldn't be in this happy situation," he explained, referring to how promising vaccine candidates that Singapore and other countries had made advance purchase agreements for have now been approved by health authorities and are being used in various countries.

While putting money into the collective pot entitles Singapore to its fair share of Covid-19 vaccines on the basis of full market price, a "significant amount" will be committed to help support the less well-off countries, Dr Balakrishnan explained.

This ensures that there will be some vaccines available to countries around the world, especially for essential workers, preventing a situation where only countries who can afford vaccines have access to them.

He also clarified that Singapore's US$5 million (S$6.7 million) contribution to the Advance Market Commitment under the Covax facility, which ensures access to vaccines for developing countries, is not specifically earmarked for Asean.

Singapore has a separate Asean Covid-19 Response Fund, which it has also committed funds to, and which will be used based on needs within the Asean family, he added. It was announced in November that Singapore will contribute US$100,000 to the fund, which helps member states procure the medical supplies and equipment needed to combat the pandemic.

Over and above the contribution to the fund, Singapore has also separately been giving test kits, personal protective equipment, and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) machines for the detection of Covid-19, among other things, to governments and non-governmental organisations throughout the region.

"We have not beat our drums about it, but that good work has been done and it has been appreciated by our neighbours," said Dr Balakrishnan.
 
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Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
If it cannot be bought, bullied or intimidated why is it vaccinating the population in the first place? There is no need for a vaccine against this relatively mild disease.
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
How about 'nudged'? :wink:

Waiting for the day the PAP govt declares Covid-19 to be a biological weapon developed by the Chinese military. :cool:
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
By the way, any fuckwit who still believes this glib-tongued Chindian mongrel career politician after the Tracetogether debacle... you're just plain stupid. Look in a mirror and you'll see stupidity staring back at you. Have a nice day! :cool:
 

mahjongking

Alfrescian
Loyal
as usual lah, in the newspapers and tv, talks until like fearless,
behind closed doors, bent down and let other countries fuck backside,

its like this since lau Goh wooden days, don't ever believe otherwise, only the 61% does
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
This is the 1st time i have heard of vaccine intimidation....that means there must be some behind the scenes shit going on with chicom land?
 

tobelightlight

Alfrescian
Loyal
Singapore will make decisions regarding the approval of vaccines on the basis of science and healthcare needs, and will not be pressured when it comes to decisions on such matters, Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan told Parliament on Monday (March 1).
Mrna Vaccine is not healthcare. It is death and injury-inducing. It is still experimental. You do not know what will happen 5 to 10 years down the road.
 

Kraken

Alfrescian
Loyal
Wah lau cheena now stepping on the SG Govt bang fist say must approve lap sap vaccine or what? invasion? already got 1 millions of chinaman inside what else they want?

ONLINE_STILL_MLC.jpg
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Mrna Vaccine is not healthcare. It is death and injury-inducing. It is still experimental. You do not know what will happen 5 to 10 years down the road.

That's why the older folks are given priority first. Because most of them would be dead 5 to 10 years down the road. Won't spoil the narrative of 'safe and effective vaccines'. :sneaky:
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
The ah tiongs dont even trust the chicom vaccine,,what a laugh

Chinese urgency on COVID-19 goes missing in vaccination drive
China's current COVID-19 vaccination pace is of "great concern", infectious disease specialist Zhang Wenhong has said. (Photo: AFP/STR)
07 Mar 2021 10:52AM (Updated: 07 Mar 2021 10:56AM)
Bookmark
BEIJING: Shirley Shi has received three offers to be vaccinated against COVID-19 - through her hometown, her Beijing residential area and her office area - but the human resources manager is in no rush.
"I'd like to keep an eye out for any adverse effects first," said Shi, who like many Chinese seems happy to take a wait-and-see approach.

Through aggressive lockdowns and mass testing of millions, China has had success controlling the virus that first surfaced on its soil in late 2019.
But vaccinating the world's most populous country is a different story.
China is still working to ramp up production of its four domestically-produced vaccines and has yet to approve any foreign-made shots in a global race for bragging rights.
For Shi, the problem is not accessibility, but a lack of urgency.

"With China's control of the epidemic domestically and my lack of plans to go abroad in the near-term, there is no need for now," she said.
Chinese experts have signalled the vaccination rate could soon quicken.
Zhong Nanshan, a respected pulmonologist and key national figure in the fight against COVID-19, said recently that China plans to immunise 40 per cent of its 1.4 billion people by June.
That would require massively increasing the number of jabs given in China, where currently only around 3.5 per cent of the population is inoculated.

That's far behind the United Kingdom's 32.99 jabs per 100 people and the United States' 25.42, according to Our World in Data, a collaboration between Oxford University and a charity.
READ: Why is Asia slow to get vaccinated? A commentary
"The sense of urgency that exists in the West, where vaccination is no less than an expected game-changer, is not present in China," said Mathieu Duchatel, director of the Asia Programme at Institut Montaigne, a Paris-based think tank.

China has had success controlling COVID-19, but vaccinations in the world's most populous country have proceeded slowly. (Photo: AFP)

HEALTH RISKS
The slower pace could pose risks for China by delaying herd immunity.
There is no globally-accepted standard for the percentage of a population that needs to be jabbed - or to develop the necessary antibodies through infection - for herd immunity against COVID-19 to kick in.
READ: Don't focus on herd immunity, vaccination should be comprehensive - COVID-19 panel expert
A November paper in medical journal Lancet estimated that percentage at 60 to 72 for a 100 per cent effective vaccine, while Gao Fu, the head of the Chinese disease control agency, put it at 70 to 80 per cent for China in comments this week.
China would need to administer 10 million doses every day for seven months to reach such thresholds, Chinese infectious disease specialist Zhang Wenhong told a recent forum. Only around 52.5 million doses had been administered as of end-February, according to Zhong.
The current pace is of "great concern", Zhang added.

China has committed to shipping COVID-19 vaccines overseas as it works to blunt foreign criticism of the initial spread of the virus from its shores. (Photo: AFP/Handout)

Besides quickening production, China has also committed to shipping vaccines overseas as it works to blunt foreign criticism of the initial spread of the virus from its shores.
Chinese companies are set to export nearly 400 million doses, state media has reported, and the government said it is providing free vaccines to 53 countries.
China is caught between "both the vaccination requirement of achieving herd immunity ... and the demand associated with its vaccine diplomacy", said Huang Yanzhong Huang, a global health fellow at the US Council on Foreign Relations.
READ: China sets 'low bar' for GDP growth, pledges more jobs
Huang said delays in herd immunity could mean China falls behind in reopening its borders - now largely closed to all but Chinese citizens - while other economies forge ahead.
This "might make China look bad", he said.
SCEPTICISM
In China, public take-up of the vaccine may also be slowed by trust issues in a country with a history of drug-safety scandals.
Market research firm Ipsos found in January that 85 per cent of adults in China said they were willing to get jabbed, but it was unclear how soon they would do so.
READ: China cracks down on fake COVID-19 vaccines
At one Beijing clinic, a doctor said jabs had been offered to all staff, but many demurred until more data on vaccine efficacy was available.

Some are taking a wait-and-see approach to getting vaccinated against COVID-19 in China. (Photo: AFP/Noel Celis)

Chinese producers are yet to release detailed data, unlike their foreign rivals.
China's vaccinations started last year with key groups like medical staff and state workers headed overseas. This has been expanded to other citizens, although largely in the biggest cities.
With its resources and demonstrated ability to mobilise for a mass effort, China may well catch up on vaccination rates once supplies increase.
Zhang Yutong, a dental clinic employee, was among a steady flow of people streaming in to one Beijing clinic after her employer arranged for jabs.
She told AFP nearly two-thirds of her colleagues had also taken the offer.
"The epidemic has become a regular part of life. It's better to have antibodies," she said.
BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the coronavirus outbreak and its developments
Download our app or subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates on the coronavirus outbreak: https://cna.asia/telegram
Source: AFP/dv
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laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
The ah tiongs dont even trust the chicom vaccine,,what a laugh

Even the Tiongs in Sinkieland are smart. They won't take any Covid vaccines, Tiong or non-Tiong, even if it means not being able to balik kampung to China for years to come.

Meanwhile, for the local Sinkies... :roflmao:

 
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