Egypt Ready to Meet Africa’s Needs for COVID-19 Vaccines

The Egyptian Minister of Health with the African Bank delegation in Cairo. (Egyptian government)
The Egyptian Minister of Health with the African Bank delegation in Cairo. (Egyptian government)
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Egypt Ready to Meet Africa’s Needs for COVID-19 Vaccines

The Egyptian Minister of Health with the African Bank delegation in Cairo. (Egyptian government)
The Egyptian Minister of Health with the African Bank delegation in Cairo. (Egyptian government)

Egypt is ready to meet the needs of African countries for coronavirus vaccines through the local production of vaccines in the factories of the state-owned Vacsera company.

Egyptian Minister of Health Hala Zayed met with Chairman of the Unified Procurement Authority Bahaa el-Din Zidan and Chairman of the African Export-Import Bank (AEIB) Benedict Oramah to discuss the supply of the Johnson and Johnson vaccine to African Vaccine Acquisition Trust (AVAT).

AVAT, in cooperation with AEIB, is part of the country’s plan to diversify and expand the provision of coronavirus vaccines.

The first batch of 261,600 Johnson and Johnson doses arrived on Monday in cooperation with the African Union (AU), as part of a series of shipments. Egypt is expected to receive 700,000 shots of the vaccine.

Zayed said the production capacity of Vacsera is ready to manufacture the vaccines and distribute them in African countries to localize the vaccine industry.

The meeting also dealt with Egypt’s readiness to meet the needs of African countries for medicines to treat malaria, AIDS, Ebola, and others.

Egypt can manufacture various types of vaccines and is ready to transfer them and drug manufacturing technology and send medical teams throughout the continent, announced Zayed.

The Chairman of the Board of Directors of the African Export and Import Bank lauded the role of AVAT, stressing that this is the first time African countries harness all their resources to provide vaccines with complete control over the management of the pandemic to preserve the health of African citizens.

He expressed his happiness with the Bank’s participation, noting that vaccines will be sent to African Union member states, including Egypt, where it is expected that vaccine shipments will increase in September.



Gaza Hospital Director’s Family Pleads for His Release

Ambulances transport wounded Palestinians from the Kamal Adwan Hospital to the al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, on December 28, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and the Hamas group. (AFP)
Ambulances transport wounded Palestinians from the Kamal Adwan Hospital to the al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, on December 28, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and the Hamas group. (AFP)
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Gaza Hospital Director’s Family Pleads for His Release

Ambulances transport wounded Palestinians from the Kamal Adwan Hospital to the al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, on December 28, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and the Hamas group. (AFP)
Ambulances transport wounded Palestinians from the Kamal Adwan Hospital to the al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City, on December 28, 2024, amid the ongoing war between Israel and the Hamas group. (AFP)

The family of a hospital director in northern Gaza is pleading with the international community and the Israeli military for his release, after soldiers detained Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya over the weekend.

Abu Safiya's family says he's being denied medical care and kept in the freezing cold in Sde Teiman, an Israeli detention center that been sharply criticized for its inhuman conditions.

Israeli military spokesman Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani said Abu Safiya “is currently being questioned regarding his potential involvement in terrorist activity.”

Over the weekend, Israeli soldiers expelled staff and patients from Kamal Adwan Hospital, where it detained 240 people who it said were militants and took them for interrogation in Israel. The military said some fighters attempted to pose as patients and hid in ambulances, without providing evidence.

Israel alleged that Hamas had been using the facility, which hospital officials have denied.

Israel’s latest military offensive in northern Gaza has largely isolated the area, with little medical or other aid allowed to reach hospitals there.

On Monday, the International Committee of the Red Cross said Israeli operations have “obliterated the health care system in northern Gaza,” noting that Kamal Adwan and Indonesian hospitals are now “completely inoperable.”