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S.Africa's Ramaphosa accuses Big Pharma of 'selfish, unjust' vaccine policy

by Reuters
Monday, 21 June 2021 13:53 GMT

South Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa arrives at the Grand Palais Ephemere for the Financing of African Economies Summit, at the Champs de Mars in Paris, France May 18, 2021. Ian Langsdon/Pool via REUTERS

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South Africa's president said unwillingness from pharmaceutical companies to waive vaccine patents was endangering the world

By Tim Cocks

JOHANNESBURG, June 21 (Reuters) - South Africa's president said on Monday the "selfish, unjust" refusal of pharmaceutical companies and allied Western governments to entertain emergency patent waivers on COVID-19 vaccines was endangering the entire world.

In unusually impassioned remarks, Cyril Ramaphosa lambasted a resistance to calls by India and South Africa for temporary patent waivers to ramp up production.

"It is selfish, it is unjust, it is wholly unfair," Ramaphosa, proponent of the waiver, told the opening virtual session of the Qatar Economic Forum, a day after South Africa registered 13,000 new cases in a third COVID-19 wave.

"We are facing an emergency that is affecting the entire world ... and some countries are refusing this provision to be waived," he said.

The proposed waiver from the WTO's agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) has support in principle from U.S. President Joe Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron.

But the pharmaceutical industry is against the waiver, as are Germany, Switzerland and the World Bank. They argue it would stifle innovation and that vaccine supplies are constrained by a lack of manufacturing capacity.

Both India and South Africa say they have ample capacity.

"All we are asking is ... a three-year period to enable countries that have the capability to be able to produce the vaccines," Ramaphosa said. "Because no one is safe anywhere in the world without everyone being safe."

South Africa has only vaccinated about 2 million people, 1.8% of its population, one of the world's lowest rates.

It suffered a setback when Aspen Pharmacare (APNJ.J), local producer of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, had to destroy 2 million doses due to contamination at a plant in Baltimore, Maryland. J&J is sending 2 million replacement doses.

Despite that setback, Ramaphosa said the government would stick with J&J because it is a one-shot vaccine, logistically a lot easier to manage in remote rural areas.

(Editing by Bernadette Baum)

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