No images? Click here SOLEMN WELCOME Two Buddhist monks light candles at Seng Guan Temple in Tondo, Manila, on Friday as the Chinese-Filipino community prepares to welcome the Lunar New Year. Like the other holidays and festivals since the start of the pandemic last year, rites welcoming the Year of the Metal Ox are expected to be toned down, with the local government prohibiting street performances and mass gatherings. —Richard A. Reyes NewsHog inventory down by 24 percentThe African swine fever devastated commercial and backyard piggeries in many regions last year, causing the country’s hog inventory to drop by 24 percent in January, its lowest beginning stock in 25 years, the Philippine Statistics Authority reported. The number of breeder pigs were also reduced by 29 percent. Commercial and backyard piggeries saw a sharp drop in inventories. —STORY BY KARL R. OCAMPO Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net Regions‘Tortured’ Aetas not retracting storyThe two men accused of terrorism are not retracting their torture allegations against Army soldiers even after being prevented from joining the opposition to the antiterror law by the Supreme Court and replacing their lawyers with government counsels. The National Commission on Indigenous Peoples was the first to help them prepare their court statements, including the claim that they were forced to eat their own feces. —STORY BY INQUIRER STAFF Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net/regions Newsletter / Join usHas this been forwarded by a friend? Subscribe now to the Philippine Daily Inquirer Newsletter and get your latest news and important updates on COVID-19. Banner StoryFDA approves 10K China vaccine doses for PSG useBy Leila B. Salaverria The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued a compassionate use license for 10,000 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine of the China National Pharmaceutical Group (Sinopharm) at the request of the Presidential Security Group (PSG), Malacañang announced on Thursday. The FDA granted the permit two months after the commander of the presidential bodyguard, Brig. Gen. Jesus Durante III, admitted that his troops had been inoculated against COVID-19 using an unauthorized vaccine that had been donated to it, though he did not identify the donor. Durante’s admission followed President Duterte’s disclosure in a televised address in mid-December that many Filipinos had already been vaccinated against COVID-19, including soldiers. He said the vaccine was the one made by Sinopharm. Unauthorized The FDA, however, said it had not authorized any of the candidate COVID-19 vaccines, kicking up a controversy that saw the PSG facing a legislative investigation, with allegations of breaking the country’s drug regulations. The investigation would have become part of the Senate committee of the whole’s inquiry into the government’s vaccination program, but President Duterte, invoking executive privilege, barred Durante from appearing at the hearings. On Thursday, presidential spokesperson Harry Roque said the presidential guard had applied for a special permit to use the Sinopharm vaccine as part of its job of protecting the President. “It is for compassionate use, because the other members of the PSG have to be vaccinated since their job is to provide security to the President,” Roque said in a press briefing. FDA chief Eric Domingo, in a message to reporters, confirmed the grant of the special permit. He said Durante’s command applied for the permit on Jan. 18. Domingo said the presidential bodyguard would report use of the vaccine and the outcome to the FDA. He said the permit was for “future use” and covered a one-time importation. Roque said he did not know how the presidential guard would procure vaccines. He also announced that the Philippines would receive 600,000 doses of China-donated vaccines on Feb. 23, a portion of which will be used to inoculate military personnel. He said the date of arrival of the COVID-19 vaccines made by Sinovac Biotech was “set in stone,” and 100,000 doses would go to the Department of National Defense, donated by China to the Philippine military. The rest would be given to medical staff in Metro Manila hospitals, the top priority group on the government’s vaccination list. The donated Sinovac shots would be on top of the 25 million doses that the Philippine government would buy from the Chinese drugmaker. Sinovac Biotech has applied for an emergency use authorization for its vaccine with the FDA. Should the vaccines arrive before the permit is issued, they will be stored until they are allowed to be used, Roque said. If a permit is not issued, the vaccines will be sent back to China, he said. Roque reiterated that President Duterte stood firm on his preference for a Chinese vaccine. He, however, said he was not at liberty to disclose which Chinese vaccine Mr. Duterte had chosen for himself. Roque also said it was uncertain which vaccine, Sinovac or Pfizer, would arrive first in the country. The Pfizer vaccines from the global procurement pool COVAX were initially expected to arrive in mid-February, but would now be delayed. Vince Dizon, deputy chief of the National Task Force Against COVID-19, said the delay in the delivery of the initial batch of 117,000 Pfizer vaccines was due to the need to process certain documents with COVAX and the World Health Organization. “But we are confident that these would arrive in the coming weeks, within the month of February,” Dizon said. The Department of Health is preparing the required documents, he said. Once the vaccines are delivered, these will be distributed first to four COVID-19 referral hospitals in Metro Manila—Philippine General Hospital in Manila, Lung Center of the Philippines and East Avenue Medical Center in Quezon City, and Dr. Jose Natalio Rodriguez Memorial Medical Center (Tala Hospital) in Caloocan City. First recipient PGH spokesperson Jonas Del Rosario, a COVID-19 survivor, will be the first employee of the hospital to receive a shot, according to hospital director Gerardo Legaspi. Del Rosario also lost his parents to the disease, Legaspi said. “It would be better for people to see that the first [to get the vaccine] would be those who offered their strength and intelligence and were affected by COVID severely. It would be a symbolic gesture of the final phase of their fight, their personal fight, against COVID,” Legaspi said. Next to get the vaccines are staff working in COVID-19 wards, who number around 1,000, Legaspi said. He said 5,134 PGH personnel had registered for vaccination, out of the 6,300 the hospital expected to sign up. Legaspi said the decision of the rest not to register may be related to their choice of vaccine. Read more: newsinfo.inquirer.net EditorialSporadic victoriesThe Sandiganbayan last week convicted businesswoman Janet Lim Napoles, former Cagayan de Oro representative Constantino Jaraula, and several former government employees of several counts of graft and malversation, for funneling some P28 million in lawmakers’ pork barrel into ghost projects and bogus nongovernment organizations. Napoles, the alleged mastermind of the P10-billion pork barrel scam, was also found guilty of plunder in 2018 in a case where her co-accused Sen. Ramon 'Bong' Revilla Jr. was acquitted. The other high-profile respondents in this case filed in 2015, former senators Juan Ponce Enrile and Jinggoy Estrada, are out on bail and awaiting the court’s decision. Read full story: opinion.inquirer.net |
Friday, February 12, 2021
FDA approves 10K China vaccine doses for PSG use. Inquirer Newsletter. February 12, 2021.
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