Egypt Prepares to Export Locally Made Covid Vaccines to Africa

Egypt seeks to become a hub for inoculations on the African continent. (Archival photo - Reuters)
Egypt seeks to become a hub for inoculations on the African continent. (Archival photo - Reuters)
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Egypt Prepares to Export Locally Made Covid Vaccines to Africa

Egypt seeks to become a hub for inoculations on the African continent. (Archival photo - Reuters)
Egypt seeks to become a hub for inoculations on the African continent. (Archival photo - Reuters)

Egypt is preparing to export locally-manufactured COVID-19 vaccines to African nations, looking forward to becoming a hub for inoculations on the continent grappling with the virus.

Egyptian authorities are expected to discuss potential export plans with a Chinese delegation in late February, Bloomberg news site quoted Heba Wali, president of the state-run Holding Company for Biological Products and Vaccines (Vacsera), as saying.

The move comes as a government official said a batch of locally made Sinovac vaccines had been sent to the Palestinian territories, in the first overseas shipment.

Negotiations are also underway to provide neighboring Libya with the Sinovac vaccine, according to Wali.

She said other African countries had requested shipments, without identifying them, saying distribution could be via the COVAX alliance or direct payments, depending on circumstances.

The World Health Organization said on Friday that Egypt is one of six African countries that will be given technology to produce mRNA vaccines.

Egypt has so far manufactured 27 million-30 million Sinovac doses and has the capacity to create a total of 100 million in 2022, acting Minister of Health and Population Khaled Abdel-Ghaffar said on Sunday.

It recently sent 500,000 Sinovac doses to the Palestinians, he added.

Talks are underway with AstraZeneca Plc on the possibility of producing its vaccine in Egypt, Wali said.



King Charles' Cancer Treatment Reportedly Progressing Well, Will Continue

FILE PHOTO: Britain's King Charles attends The King's Foundation's annual 'Crafts at Christmas' at Highgrove Gardens on December 13, 2024 in Tetbury, England. Chris Jackson/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Britain's King Charles attends The King's Foundation's annual 'Crafts at Christmas' at Highgrove Gardens on December 13, 2024 in Tetbury, England. Chris Jackson/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
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King Charles' Cancer Treatment Reportedly Progressing Well, Will Continue

FILE PHOTO: Britain's King Charles attends The King's Foundation's annual 'Crafts at Christmas' at Highgrove Gardens on December 13, 2024 in Tetbury, England. Chris Jackson/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Britain's King Charles attends The King's Foundation's annual 'Crafts at Christmas' at Highgrove Gardens on December 13, 2024 in Tetbury, England. Chris Jackson/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo

King Charles' cancer treatment is progressing well and will continue into next year, a Buckingham Palace source said on Friday.

In February, the palace revealed the 76-year-old, who became king in 2022, had been diagnosed with an unspecified form of cancer detected in tests after a corrective procedure for an enlarged prostate. He returned to public duties in April.

"His treatment has been moving in a positive direction and as a managed condition the treatment cycle will continue into next year," the palace source told Reuters.

Charles' medical team has carefully monitored the monarch's official engagements since he returned to public life.

The palace source said there had been no change in Charles' health and the news that his treatment would continue in 2025 did not represent any significant update.
In October, Charles and his wife Camilla made a brief stopover in India where they stayed at a holistic health center following his first major trip since being diagnosed with cancer to Australia and Samoa.