Caretaker Health Minister Hamad Hasan said Friday that Lebanon has made an agreement with the World Health Organization to secure the country’s share of a possible Russian coronavirus vaccine.
“We have entered into an agreement with the World Health Organization to reserve Lebanon's share of the possible
vaccine for
coronavirus, and coordination is underway with Russia to secure a package of the Russian
vaccine,” Hasan said in a televised conference.
He added that “money was available from a World Bank loan.”
This comes as Lebanon’s
coronavirus cases hit record numbers over the last week in conjunction with the devastating aftermath of the Beirut Port explosion, which has overwhelmed the already fragile health sector.
Russia announced last week that it had started manufacturing its new
vaccine, named Sputnik V.
Russia became the first country in the world to license a
vaccine when President Vladimir Putin announced its approval ahead of phase 3 testing. It was later announced that large scale testing would proceed, involving some 40,000 people according to the Sputnik V
vaccine’s financial backers.
Lebanon Friday began its first day of a stringent two-week lockdown. Restrictions will be implemented from Aug. 21 until Sept. 6, during which curfew will be reinstated from 6 p.m. until 6 a.m. every day.
Lebanon confirmed a record 605 new
coronavirus cases and four deaths Thursday. The positivity rate among tests conducted on the local population was 0.82 percent in June and 2.14 percent in July. Thursday the positivity rate, among the local population and travelers, was 9.54 percent.