Many poorer countries forced to suspend coronavirus vaccine programme, WHO says
- Vaccine shortages have meant people who have received one dose of the Covid-19 vaccine have a long wait before they can get their second jab
- The countries affected are spread throughout the Indian subcontinent, Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America and the Middle East, a WHO expert said

A “huge number” of poorer countries have had to suspend their coronavirus vaccination programmes due to a lack of doses, the World Health Organization said Friday.
“We have a huge number of countries that have had to suspend their roll-out of their second doses of vaccine,” said Bruce Aylward, the WHO’s frontman for the international Covax Facility scheme which provides vaccine doses to poorer countries.
“If I remember correctly, it’s over 30 or 40 countries that could have been targeted for second doses of AstraZeneca vaccines, for example, who will not be able to do that,” Aylward added.
The countries affected by this problem are spread throughout the Indian subcontinent, Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America and the Middle East, the WHO expert said.
Countries around India, such as Nepal and Sri Lanka, have been “particularly hit hard” and face “a severe wave of disease”, he added.
The Serum Institute of India (SII), producing AstraZeneca doses, was supposed to be the backbone of Covax’s supply chain – but India restricted exports to combat its own devastating coronavirus surge.