Audio By Carbonatix
A provisional 270 million doses of Covid-19 vaccines have been secured by the African Union (AU) for distribution across the continent.
All of the doses will be used this year, promises current AU head South African President Cyril Ramaphosa.
This is on top of 600 million doses already promised but is still not enough to vaccinate the whole region.
There are fears that poorer countries globally will wait far longer than richer nations to be inoculated.
Although infection numbers and death rates are comparatively lower across most of Africa, cases are spiking again in some areas.
A new variant of Covid-19 in South Africa is causing particular alarm and makes up most of the new cases.
"As a result of our own efforts we have so far secured a commitment of a provisional amount of 270 million vaccines from three major suppliers: Pfizer, AstraZeneca (through Serum Institute of India) and Johnson & Johnson," President Ramaphosa said on Wednesday.
At least 50 million of the doses will be available "for the crucial period of April to June 2021," he said.
In addition, the region is expecting around 600 million doses from the global Covax effort which aims to provide vaccines to lower-income countries.
But officials are still waiting for details and are now "happy we have alternative solutions," Nicaise Ndembi, senior science adviser for the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told the AP news agency.
Mr Ramaphosa said officials are worried that the doses from the Covax effort released in the first half of 2021 will only be enough to inoculate health care workers. With a population of 1.3 billion people and each person requiring two vaccine jabs, Africa would need around 2.6 billion doses to eventually vaccinate everyone.
"These endeavours aim to supplement the Covax efforts, and to ensure that as many dosages of vaccine as possible become available throughout Africa as soon as possible," he explained.
Africa has recorded more than three million cases of Covid-19 and nearly 75,000 deaths. By contrast, the US has reported close to 23 million infections and more than 383,000 fatalities.
There has been a global rush to buy vaccines, with richer countries accused of buying up most of the supply.
Latest Stories
-
Ashanti Regional Minister announces restart of some legacy road projects
8 minutes -
JOY FM gave me the platform for my voice to be heard in Ghana and beyond – Reverend Sam Korankye Ankrah
10 minutes -
Our ambition is to win the WAFCON – Kurt Okraku
12 minutes -
IMF clarifies $214m figure as accounting cost, not GoldBod loss
16 minutes -
How Sedina Tamaklo misappropriated state funds leading to her 10-year jail term
26 minutes -
Community Police Assistant arrested over assault on patient at Assin Health Centre
41 minutes -
Connecting faith and music: Dennis Nii Noi’s impact on Ghana’s gospel scene
1 hour -
CIB Ghana reinforces ethics, skills development as it charts 2026 growth
1 hour -
Ghana and Japan explore new investment opportunities at Accra B2B reception
1 hour -
Shatta Wale says he made $3m from music catalogue sale
1 hour -
APN launches logo design competition for “Make Africa Borderless Now!” campaign
2 hours -
Effective regulation and pricing frameworks of the NPA key to consistent fuel price reductions – Finance & Energy Analyst
2 hours -
UG SRC, GRASAG defend student levy increase to fund accommodation projects
2 hours -
Esther Smith refutes claims Pastor Elvis Agyemang charged for prayers
2 hours -
Seven canoes seized as Navy cracks down on fuel smuggling in Keta–Aflao
2 hours
