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The Financial Express

Hungary, Bolivia seek COVID-19 vaccine from Bangladesh

| Updated: January 31, 2021 21:26:49


Hungary, Bolivia seek COVID-19 vaccine from Bangladesh

State Minister for Foreign Affairs Shahriar Alam on Sunday said Hungary and Bolivia have sought doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine from Bangladesh.

The state minister also said in the parliament that Bangladesh has considered Hungary’s request for 5,000  doses of the vaccine, reports bdnews24.com.

Shahriar said Bolivia, a South American country, has sent letter seeking the vaccine. "The prime minister and the health ministry will take a decision in this matter,” he added.

Meanwhile, Hungary became the European Union’s first member to approve China’s Sinopharm COVID-19 vaccine, sealing a deal on Friday for 5 million doses just a week after becoming the first EU member to buy Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine, Reuters reports.

Hungary’s drug regulator gave emergency use approval to the Sinopharm vaccine, rather than waiting for the bloc’s European Medicines Agency to give the go-ahead, adding it to a list that also includes the Pfizer, Moderna and AstraZeneca vaccines as well as Russia’s Sputnik-V shot.

Bangladesh’s ties with Hungary deepened after Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina made a three-day state visit to Budapest in 2016. Hungary was one of the first European countries to recognise Bangladesh as an independent nation following the 1971 Liberation War.

Bangladesh is using the vaccine developed by the UK’s Oxford University and British-Swedish drugmaker AstraZeneca for mass vaccination.  The manufacturer of the vaccine, Serum Institute of India, has sent the first batch of five million doses, part of 30 million doses ordered by Bangladesh. India has also sent two million doses for free.

Hasina inaugurated the vaccination drive via video conferencing with a nurse given the first dose at the Kurmitola General Hospital in Dhaka on Jan 27.

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