By Valentine Amanze, Online Editor
The World Health Organization (WHO) has said that Nigeria would receive its first four million doses of coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines next week from the global COVAX programme for poor and middle-income countries.
Walter Kazadi Mulombo, head of WHO’s mission in Nigeria, disclosed on Friday via video link that Nigeria was expecting 14 million doses in total.
But the Director General of the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), Chikwe Ihekweazu, said that the situation in Nigeria was so far much better than had been widely predicted early in the pandemic.
Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country with some 200 million people, has reported fewer than 1,900 COVID-19 deaths so far, according to Reuters report.
“The whole world expected the continent of Africa, and Nigeria with our social and economic realities, to basically fall apart,” Ihekweazu said during the programme.
He also referred to the findings of seroprevalence studies, published on Monday, which suggested that 23% of Lagos State inhabitants – around four million people – may have had COVID-19 in October.
He said that studies in four Nigerian states had shown that serious illness appeared to be rarer than feared, possibly in part because of the young average age of the population.
“Getting the vaccine into Nigeria will serve the continent well, will serve the world well,” he said.
Nigeria plans to inoculate 40 percent of the population this year and 30 percent more in 2022.
Ihekweazu disclosed that authorities recognised the need for equity in access to vaccines and was committed to pursuing multilateral deals.
“We will not look for bilateral deals,” Ihekweazu said.
“We will work in a multilateral way with WHO, with COVAX with the African Union (AU) to make sure that as we get vaccines into Nigeria, the same happens … across the continent,” he said.
Recall that Ghana was the first country to receive COVAX followed by Ivory Coast this week.