Thailand approves AstraZeneca vaccine amid second virus wave

People wearing face masks walk through Chinatown in Bangkok on Jan 2, 2021, after the Thailand's capital imposed temporary lockdown measures aimed at curbing the rising coronavirus toll. (PHOTO / BLOOMBERG)

ANKARA / DHAKA / BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN / KUALA LUMPUR / SEOUL / COLOMBO / DUBAI / MANILA / HANOI – Thailand approved AstraZeneca Plc’s COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use, paving the way for the country to begin inoculating its 67 million people amid a resurgence in the coronavirus cases.

Thailand’s Food and Drug Administration granted the approval for the vaccine on Thursday, Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul said by phone. AstraZeneca is the first coronavirus vaccine developer to win approval in Thailand, which also has ordered shots developed by China’s Sinovac Biotech Ltd.

“Now we’ll have to wait for the vaccines to be shipped to Thailand, which we’re speaking with the company about,” Anutin said.

Thai government has ordered 61 million shots of AstraZeneca vaccine, which has won approvals for emergency use in countries including India, the UK and Brazil. The regulatory nod will also open the door for imports by private Thai companies for administering the doses to people who can afford to pay.

Thailand, which was relatively successful last year in containing the pathogen, is betting on wider availability of the vaccine to revive its tourism-reliant economy that’s devastated by the pandemic. The Southeast Asian nation has set a target of inoculating at least 50 percent of the nation’s population before the end of 2021 as it battles a new wave of infections that’s seen total cases almost triple in the past month to almost 13,000.

Bangladesh 

Bangladesh on Thursday received 2 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine "Covishield" developed by Oxford University and AstraZeneca as a gift from India.

At a ceremony in Dhaka, Indian High Commissioner to Bangladesh Vikram Doraiswami handed over the vaccine, manufactured by Serum Institute of India, to the Bangladeshi side.

The Bangladeshi government has already decided to procure 30 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine from Serum Institute of India.

The first shipment of imported doses is expected to arrive in Dhaka by Jan 25.

Bangladesh reported 584 new COVID-19 cases and 16 new deaths on Thursday, making the tally at 530,271 and death toll at 7,966, the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS) said.

Brunei

Brunei recorded 260 days without local COVID-19 cases on Thursday, with the national tally of confirmed cases remaining at 174.

According to Brunei's Ministry of Health, no more recoveries were recorded, keeping the total number of recovered patients at 169. There are two active cases still being treated at the National Isolation Center.

A total of 33 imported cases have been confirmed since the last local infection case was reported on May 6, 2020.

Meanwhile, there are currently 623 returned overseas travellers in mandatory isolation at the monitoring centers provided by the government.

There have been three deaths reported from the COVID-19 pandemic so far in Brunei.

India

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will get a coronavirus shot in the second phase of the country’s inoculation campaign, broadcaster NDTV reported on Thursday citing sources, as many states struggle to meet targets partly due to fears over possible side-effects.

India's COVID-19 tally rose to 10,610,883 on Thursday as 15,223 new cases were registered during the past 24 hours, said the latest data from the federal health ministry.

According to the official data, the death toll mounted to 152,869 with 151 new deaths.

There are still 192,308 active cases in the country, while 10,265,706 people have been discharged from hospitals after medical treatment. It was the first time on Wednesday, in nearly seven months, when the number of active COVID-19 cases in the country fell below the 200,000-mark.

Indonesia

Indonesia has given the first dose of COVID-19 vaccines to 60,815 people in the first week of its mass inoculation program. The Southeast Asian nation aims to inoculate 181.5 million people, about two-thirds of its population, by the end of the year to curb an infection that has sickened over 900,000 people across the country and killed more than 26,000, the highest in the region.

Iran

Iran's Health Ministry reported 6,204 new COVID-19 cases on Thursday, raising the total nationwide number to 1,354,520.

The pandemic has so far claimed 57,150 lives in Iran, up by 93 in the past 24 hours, said Sima Sadat Lari, spokeswoman for Iranian Ministry of Health and Medical Education, during her daily briefing.

Of the newly infected, 677 were hospitalized, Lari added.

Iraq

Iraq reported 746 new COVID-19 cases, bringing the total nationwide infections to 610,598.

It also reported six new deaths, raising the death toll from the infectious virus in Iraq to 12,968, and 1,909 more recovered cases, bringing its total recoveries to 574,920.

READ MORE: India 'could produce 500m vaccines a month for export'

Israel

In Israel, 9,089 new COVID-19 cases were reported , bringing the total number in the country to 574,718.

The death toll from COVID-19 in Israel reached 4,174 after 94 new fatalities were added, while the  total recoveries rose to 484,499, with 5,602 newly recovered cases.

 It also reported ten more cases of the new COVID-19 strain, bringing the total number of patients tested positive for COVID-19 variants in Israel to 169.

Jordan

Jordan recorded 978 new COVID-19 cases and 17 more fatalities, pushing up its tally of infections to 317,405 and its death toll to 4,187. The total recoveries in the kingdom climbed by 1,215 to 303,108.

Kuwait

Kuwait's COVID-19 cases increased by 442 to 159,264, while the death toll rose by one to 951. It also announced the recovery of 484 more patients, taking the total recoveries to 152,420.

Lebanon

The death toll of COVID-19 in Lebanon rose to 2,084 with 64 deaths were added, while the number of confirmed cases increased by 4,332 to 264,647.

Lebanon is facing a very dangerous pandemic situation amid an unprecedented increase in the number of infections and the inability of hospitals to receive an increasing number of COVID-19 patients.

Malaysia

Malaysia reported 3,170 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 on Thursday, bringing its total tally to 172,549.

Health Ministry Director-General Noor Hisham Abdullah said in a press briefing that eight of the new cases were imported ones, and the rest 3,162 were local transmissions.

Official data showed 12 more deaths were reported from the coronavirus epidemic, bringing the COVID-19 death toll to 642.

A health care worker prepares a dose of the CoronaVac vaccine at a nursing home in Ankara, on Jan 19, 2021. (ADEM ALTAN / AFP)

Mongolia 

Mongolia added 16 COVID-19 cases in the past 24 hours after 12,940 tests had been conducted across the country, the National Center for Communicable Diseases (NCCD) said Thursday.

The latest cases were locally transmitted or detected in the country's capital Ulan Bator, Amarjargal Ambaselmaa, head of the NCCD's Surveillance Department, said at a daily press conference.

Mongolia has confirmed a total of 1,584 COVID-19 cases so far, including more than 1,100 locally transmitted ones.

Meanwhile, 13 more patients have recovered from the disease, taking the total to 1,046.

Myanmar 

Myanmar expects to start inoculating its nearly 55 million population from next month, the Health Ministry said on Wednesday. The nation expects to receive the first batch of Covid-19 vaccines from the Serum Institute of India in the coming weeks, according to Khin Khin Gyi, director of emerging infectious disease at the ministry.

Oman

The Omani Health Ministry on Thursday announced 169 new COVID-19 infections, raising the total number of confirmed cases in the country to 132,486, the official Oman News Agency reported.

ALSO READ: M'sia reports 3,631 new cases, expands curbs to counter spread

Qatar

In Qatar, 271 new COVID-19 infections were announced, raising the total number of confirmed cases to 148,000, while 132 more recovered from the virus, bringing the overall recoveries to 144,350. The fatalities remained 248 in the Gulf state for the third day running.

Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia reported 238 new coronavirus cases and three more fatalities, taking its tally of COVID-19 infections to 365,563 and its death toll to 6,338. The total recoveries in the kingdom rose by 173 to 357,177.

South Korea

South Korea reported 401 more cases of COVID-19 as of midnight Thursday compared to 24 hours ago, raising the total number of infections to 73,918.

The daily caseload stayed below 500 for four straight days after peaking at 1,240 on Dec. 25.

The virus spread showed signs of moderating this year, but the daily number of infections hovered above 100 since Nov. 8 owing to small cluster infections in Seoul and its surrounding Gyeonggi province as well as imported cases.

Of the new cases, 122 were Seoul residents and 133 were people residing in Gyeonggi province.

Twenty-one were imported from overseas, lifting the combined figure to 6,031.

Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka fully reopened its borders to tourists and international arrivals from all countries on Thursday.

An Oman Air flight carrying 50 Sri Lankans arrived at the Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA) in Colombo early Thursday.

Speaking to media in the commercial capital Colombo, Minister of Tourism Prasanna Ranatunga thanked President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa for reviving the COVID-19-affected tourism industry which employs three million people.

Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority (SLTDA) Chairperson Kimarli Fernando said that the tourism ministry has formulated detailed safety protocols and procedures in consultation with the health ministry and the presidential task force on COVID-19.

In this Jan 9, 2021 file photo, vials of Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine are placed next to a loaded syringe in Throop, Pennsylvania. (CHRISTOPHER DOLAN / THE TIMES-TRIBUNE VIA AP)

The Philippines

The Philippines is nearing a deal with Moderna Inc. for as much as 20 million vaccine doses as it monitors a post-holiday spike in coronavirus cases outside Manila.

A supply deal with Moderna will likely be finished this month, Carlito Galvez, who leads the vaccination program, said in a televised briefing on Thursday. The nation is also expecting to receive fewer doses from the World Health Organization-backed Covax Facility, he said.

Infections outside the Manila capital region are rising. “People went back to the provinces during the holidays and had festivities, so that may have contributed to the increase,” Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire said at the same briefing.

The UAE

Dubai has suspended non-essential surgery for a month and live entertainment in hotels and restaurants until further notice as coronavirus infections surge in the Middle East trade hub.

The decision to postpone certain surgeries, which takes effect midnight on Thursday and could be extended, was aimed at ensuring the preparedness of health facilities to manage COVID-19 cases, Dubai’s health regulator said in a circular published on Wednesday.

Dubai’s tourism department issued a circular, seen by Reuters, suspending entertainment in hotels and restaurants after recording an increase in violations of coronavirus precautions.

Daily cases in the United Arab Emirates hit a record 3,506 on Wednesday, the highest in the Gulf Arab region where daily tallies in each of the other five states have fallen below 500.

Turkey 

Turkey announced on Wednesday that the country has so far vaccinated 1.04 million citizens during the first week of its nationwide mass inoculation program against COVID-19. Meanwhile, Lebanon registered 64 COVID-19 deaths, the highest daily increase recorded for the second consecutive day.

The vaccination process started across Turkey on Jan. 14 with the vaccines developed by Chinese company Sinovac. Over 1 million healthcare workers were among the first group to get vaccinated, followed by citizens living and working in nursing homes, disabled care centers, and care homes.

Meanwhile, Turkey plans to resume face-to-face education in mid-February with the "highest capacity possible" amid the ongoing mass vaccination process against COVID-19.

Turkey confirmed on Wednesday 6,435 new COVID-19 cases, raising the total number in the country to 2,406,216, while the death toll from the virus rose by 159 to 24,487, and the total recoveries climbed to 2,283,919.

Vietnam

Vietnam recorded two new confirmed cases of COVID-19 on Thursday, raising its total tally to 1,546 with 35 deaths, according to its Ministry of Health.

Both new cases are Vietnamese citizens who recently entered the country from abroad and were quarantined upon arrival.