The South African Federation of Trade Unions (SAFTU) is worried about the snail-paced vaccine roll-out. Government will not meet the target in the roll-out plan, to inoculate over 40 million – two thirds of our population – by the end of the year.
It is clear that the government is apathetic, and the roll-out is indeed fatally slow paced. During the first week (17-21 May) of Phase 2, the Eastern Cape is reported to have vaccinated 9 000 residents, the Northern Cape 1 272, the Northwest a little over 31 000, Mpumalanga 2 175, about 44 000 in Limpopo about 44 000, and the Free State just 2 887.
In total, government reports that only 647 983 people had been vaccinated by late May, a scandalously low rate. And these figures must be taken with a pinch of salt, given that the departments in various provinces want to advance the propaganda that the vaccine is rolling out smoothly.
But currently, with these numbers, the average is 6 821 per day. At this rate it will take approximately 16 years and 16 days to obtain herd immunity. Even if we were to administer an average of 50 000 complete doses a day, it will take us 2 years, 2 months, and 8 days to reach herd immunity. Doubling this to 100 000 complete does per day, will still take 1 year 1 month and 4 days. This means, even at this rate, which is unlikely, government will still not meet the vaccine roll-out target.
To put this shameful record into perspective, the low average daily vaccine rate is at the level of the world’s lowest roll-out competence, in spite of our fatalities of more than 150 000 (with excess deaths), considered fifth highest per capita rate on earth.
Noting the combination of factors above, how will government get closer to meeting the target in vaccine roll-out, given that corruption is running rampant? The Special Investigation Unit has estimated up to R2 billion was lost due to irregular expenditure on Personal Protective Equipment in Gauteng alone last year.
In a report published today, it appears that R90 million of the R150 million in a Covid-19 communications fund was allegedly stolen by close associates of the Health Minister, Zweli Mkhize. His prior roles as ANC Treasurer and KwaZulu-Natal premier left us worried that notwithstanding his admirable respect for medical science, his gravy-train politics and ruling-party loyalty would leave society in the lurch.
The total sum of these factors presents a grim trajectory for the vaccine roll-out. Especially with the third wave now apparent, South Africans are facing doom and gloom. Families will continue to lose their loved ones and mourn, because their government has been hesitant to procure early, and respected the power of Big Pharma crony-capitalism instead of fighting it tooth and nail.
The lack of a serious commitment to fighting the pandemic within the South African elite means that our own citizens – and the peoples of the world – will not gain herd immunity on the schedule required to solve this crisis. And as ever, it is the working class of the poorer and most unequal countries – of which South Africa still ranks worst – who will suffer the most.
The rich can easily ride out the storm and finagle their way to the front of the vaccine queue, just behind Johann Rupert with his private jet to Zurich, as inequality soars to new heights.
This depraved, self-destructive course of events, so easily foreseen and prevented if only socialist healthcare values had prevailed, is destined to let Covid-19 continue mutating – and threatening society for years to come.
The slow pace will continue for the foreseeable future and is due to several factors.
- Firstly, there was an insufficient procurement of vaccines, mainly because government accepted the Covax system pushed on the World Health Organisation by imperial powers and philanthropists aiming to protect Intellectual Property (IP) and Big Pharma profits.
- Secondly, South Africa apparently still suffers from a lack of storage and transportation to allow the vaccines to reach distribution sites on time.
- Thirdly, there is a lack of capacity at vaccination sites.
- Finally, whomever insisted on mainly online registration for vaccinations does not understand the digital divide.
Highlighted in our last statement on vaccine roll-out, is the problem of vaccine imperialism. Rich countries are hoarding the vaccine: the top eight countries have an anticipated one billion surplus doses, according to the International Monetary Fund, with some like Canada ordering five times as many as they have citizens. Worse, with a few exceptions, they not acceding to waiver of Intellectual Property rights so that generic versions can be produced in many facilities now standing idle.
Germany’s leader Angela Merkel has taken over as the most criminal international profiteer on behalf of her compatriots at BioNTech (which collaborates with Pfizer). Her government claims, “The protection of intellectual property is a source of innovation and this has to remain so in the future.”
But this ignores three basic facts:
- we are in a global pandemic in which failure to vaccinate the whole world ensures ongoing Covid-19 variants;
- because neoliberal governments in India and South Africa proposed the IP waiver, it is only temporary and is no threat to more general corporate profiteering; and
- there was massive public-sector subsidisation of the R&D process so Big Pharma is already making windfall profits.
Merkel’s line is identical to Big Pharma’s narrative twenty years ago, when trying to make AIDS medicines unaffordable so as to profit off IP on anti-retroviral drugs subsidised by the public sector.
In terms dictated by transnational monopoly pharmaceuticals, countries have been struggling to procure vaccines at affordable prices. South Africa has, as a result, been unable to procure enough doses of Covid-19 vaccines. The Sunday Times reported last week that government procured 1 million Pfizer doses and 1.1 million doses of J&J. (In comparison, the Aspen Pharma plant in Nelson Mandela Bay is now up and running and has the capacity to produce more than 25 million doses each month.)
For the Phase 2 roll out plan which aims to vaccinate over 5 million adults who are over 60 years or who have other urgent healthcare needs, such procurement is insufficient. This is beside the fact that the Phase 1 roll-out to inoculate 1.2 million health care workers was a failure.
Indeed, elderly people who should be inoculated in Phase 2 are already unable to get the vaccine because of shortages in many sites.
Though national department of health had assured the public that transportation and storage will not be a problem – given procurement of transport services from DSV Healthcare – it is evident that the elderly in especially rural provinces were turned away from vaccination sites – in part because of the healthcare system’s inability to deliver.
The problems of distribution, transport, storage, and the simple lack of vaccines are compounded by inadequate capacity within the health sector, as there are insufficient health workers. Many nurses remain unvaccinated.
And the private sector – which pledged to assist the state – is also ill-equipped for vaccinating the masses of people, given the class-apartheid system of healthcare they have designed, keeping 86% of society dependent upon a state that suffers ever-worsening Treasury budget cuts.
In addition to these problems, expecting our society to register online for vaccination is absurd. Old people in the villages will not be able register. This explains why there is a low level of registration across all provinces.
The Gauteng provincial department of health – suffering endless corruption allegations – understated the problems of roll-out, labeling them merely “teething issues.” Cyril Ramaphosa at least admitted that the roll-out is “slow,” although he shifts the blame to vaccine imperialism and therefore holds that the problem is beyond their control.
Yet Ramaphosa tells society this periodically, but never articulates a strategy to put pressure on the imperialists. This puts even more pressure on groups like the C19 Peoples Coalition and Doctors without Borders to organise advocacy, such as protesting at embassies.
Why isn’t this crisis inserted by Ramaphosa daily into global media, the United Nations, other multilateral institutions, and bilateral negotiations, especially with the European Union and United Kingdom?
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