The U.N.-backed COVAX vaccine facility was supposed to be a game changer. But with less than ten percent of Africans vaccinated — well short of the African Union’s goal of 60% by the end of this year — Strive Masiyiwa, the head of the Union’s vaccination effort, says the continent can no longer rely on donations and vaccines produced abroad to fight disease. Masiyiwa tells POLITICO’s Ryan Heath about his negotiations with the Indian government after he realized they would no longer be exporting vaccines to Africa — and why that moment convinced him the only thing left to do was to build out a vaccine infrastructure back home.
On the difference between what wealthier countries have pledged and have been willing to part with during the coronavirus pandemic
“What we understood to be equitable treatment is obviously not the way the rich nations looked at it. From the perspective of the rich nations, it meant we get [vaccines] first. And when we’ve done with saving our own people, we will then attend to you. We thought that vaccines would become available.” — Strive Masiyiwa, the head of the African Vaccine Acquisition Task Team and the founder and executive chair of Econet
On convincing a Johnson & Johnson-related factory in South Africa to deliver vaccines to African countries instead of Europe
“We were then able to literally arm-twist [European negotiators] to say, ‘Well, look, how can you produce on the African continent and ship to Europe?’ Because if you remember, there was actually a row between South Africa and Europe over this issue to say, ‘How can you accept an arrangement whereby vaccines produced in Africa are shipped to Europe while Africa has no vaccines?’ OK, then Europe sort of pulled back and said, ‘OK, you can have what’s produced there.’ Initially, they said, you can have 50%. We said, ‘No, no, we’re paying for these vaccines. We’re not asking anyone for a donation. We’re paying for them.’”
On his epiphany after the Indian government placed an export ban on vaccines, including those intended for African countries
“It was alarm bells everywhere as we realized that the COVAX deliveries out of these huge Indian factories would not come through … I’m not going to beat up on India. The bottom line is those who had the production assets are the ones who could vaccinate their people.”
On the secondary consequences of the coronavirus pandemic
“Now, when you’re having to lock down the poorest people who live on $2 a day, the economic, social and mental health issues and social cohesion are horrendous. Never mind the loss of life for a moment. So we are beginning to see a lot of issues, which I think are being amplified by these particularly rising tensions, conflicts that we hadn’t seen for a very long time … we’ve had five or six coups in just the last 18 months, which is more than I’ve seen in a generation. Now is this a causality? I’m not a social scientist — we’ll know in due course — but certainly the economic stress on our people … when you consider the fact that we have no stimulus packages … we cannot help people.”
Click link to listen to Masiyiwa’s podcast