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Pakistan To Start Importing China’s CanSino Covid Vaccine For Commercial Sale

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A logo of China’s vaccine specialist CanSino Biologics Inc is pictured on the company’s headquarters.

Islamabad:

A private company in Pakistan will begin receiving shipments of China’s CanSino Biologics COVID-19 vaccine this week for commercial sale, an official at the company’s local partner told Reuters on Monday.

Pakistan, one of the first countries in the world to allow private imports of COVID-19 vaccines, has already received a batch of the Russian Sputnik vaccine.

“We expect the first 10,000 doses to come on March 25, and 100,000 next month and 200,000 the month after,” said Hassan Abbas, an official of AJ Pharma, CanSino’s local partner, which will be importing the vaccine.

“The issues with pricing have been worked out with the government and now we are waiting for a notification.”

The vaccine’s commercial name will be “Convidecia”, Abbas said, adding that five hospitals that ran its clinical trials will provide its doses for sale.

Pakistan is in the process of vaccinating frontline healthcare workers and citizens over the age of 60 free of charge using Sinopharm doses donated by China.

The commercial administration of vaccines is yet to begin as the government settles pricing issues, after reversing its decision to allow uncapped prices.

The government has approved a mechanism to fix open market prices for the vaccines, according to a health ministry summary seen by Reuters.

The summary proposed a price of 8,449 rupees ($54.30) per pack of two injections of the Russian vaccine and 4,225 ($27.15) per injection for the Chinese Convidecia.

The prices have been capped on the basis of the approved mechanism, it said.

However, the minister in charge of COVID operations, Asad Umar, told a local TV channel that according to the mechanism, the trade price for an imported vaccine will add 40% mark up in the landed cost, with another 15% for retailers or hospitals.

CanSino Biologics and Pakistan’s Health Minister Faisal Sultan did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Pakistan is experiencing a sharp rise in COVID-19 infections, reporting on Saturday the highest number of positive cases in a day since July.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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