https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/28/world/africa/covid-19-vaccines-south-africa.html

For Covid-19 Vaccines, Some Are Too Rich — and Too Poor
Global inequality is shaping which countries get vaccines first. In South 
Africa, people’s best chance for vaccines anytime soon is to join an 
experimental trial.

By Matt Apuzzo and Selam Gebrekidan 

Participating in a Johnson & Johnson vaccine trial this month at the Desmond 
Tutu H.I.V. Foundation Youth Center near Cape Town.Joao Silva/The New York Times
CAPE TOWN — A few months from now, a factory in South Africa is expected to 
begin churning out a million doses of Covid-19 vaccine each day in the African 
country hardest-hit by the pandemic.

But those vials will probably be shipped to a distribution center in Europe and 
then rushed to Western countries that have pre-ordered them by the hundreds of 
millions. None have been set aside for South Africa.

The country, which will help manufacture the vaccine and whose citizens have 
enrolled in clinical trials, does not expect to see the first trickle of doses 
until around the middle of next year. By then, the United States, Britain and 
Canada may already have vaccinated more than 100 million people.

The first year of the Covid-19 pandemic revealed that a country’s wealth would 
not spare it from the virus. Overconfidence, poor planning and ignored warnings 
felled some of the world’s richest nations. But now, money is translating into 
undeniable advantages.

Over the past few months, rich nations like the United States and Britain have 
cut deals with multiple drug manufacturers and secured enough doses to 
vaccinate their citizens multiple times over. China and Russia have conducted 
their own trials and begun mass vaccination programs.

Yet countries like South Africa are in a singular bind because they cannot hold 
out hope for charity. Although its government is nearly insolvent and half of 
its citizens live in poverty, South Africa is considered too rich to qualify 
for cut-rate vaccines from international aid organizations.


Vaccine trial participants being summoned by a doctor at the Desmond Tutu 
center.Joao Silva/The New York Times
“Where you’re not rich enough but you’re not poor enough, you’re stuck,” said 
Salim Abdool Karim, an epidemiologist who leads the country’s coronavirus 
advisory council.

Poor and middle-income nations, largely unable to compete in the open market, 
rely on a complex vaccine sharing scheme called Covax. A collaboration of 
international health organizations, Covax was designed to avoid the inequities 
of a free-market free-for-all. But its deals come with strings attached, and 
health advocates are questioning its transparency and accountability.

By the middle of next year, South African officials hope to secure their first 
vaccine doses under Covax, even as they negotiate to buy supplemental supplies 
from drug manufacturers. But in a country where luxury estates are walled off 
from sprawling squatter villages, many expect the newest vaccines to remain a 
privilege for residents who can pay out of pocket or through supplemental 
insurance — a program that disproportionately benefits white people.

“You’ll be able to stride into your local private pharmacy and pay a couple 
hundred rand (about $15) and say, ‘Hit me baby,’” said Francois Venter, a 
researcher at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg.

‘Maybe We’ll Get the Vaccine in 2025’

The best chance that many South Africans have to get vaccinated anytime soon is 
to volunteer for a clinical trial and test unproven vaccines on their bodies. 
But that arrangement has raised ethical questions.

First is whether countries like South Africa, which is supporting trials by 
four drugmakers, should be guaranteed doses if the trials succeed. The 
government hasn’t received such a guarantee. And at any rate, such an 
arrangement would be ethically murky, since it would punish countries that 
participate in unsuccessful trials.

This month, as Britain prepared to begin its vaccination campaign, dozens of 
people walked from their shacks in Masiphumelele township, south of Cape Town, 
to the gates of the Desmond Tutu Health Foundation.

They waited outside for hours, under the shade of a gum tree, for a chance to 
enroll in a clinical trial of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

“The people at the top, they’re going to get the vaccine, the people who have 
power,” said Mtshaba Mzwamadoda, 42, who lives in a one-bedroom corrugated 
metal shack with his wife and three children. “Maybe we’ll get the vaccine in 
2025.”

“We’ll all be dead then,” said Prudence Nonzamedyantyi, 46, a housekeeper from 
the same township.

Prudence Nonzamedyantyi, 46, outside her home in Masiphumelele township.Joao 
Silva/The New York Times
“That’s why we signed up,” Mr. Mzwamadoda said. “This is the only chance I 
have.”

Katherine Gill, an AIDS researcher who is leading the trial, usually tempers 
her enthusiasm for such tests. But early results from other drugmakers have 
been promising. “My assumption is that unless you get onto a vaccine study, 
you’re not going to have access to any vaccine anytime soon,” Dr. Gill said, 
“which is obviously quite heartbreaking.”

In the 1990s, when antiretroviral drugs to treat H.I.V. were developed, South 
Africans volunteered for clinical trials, knowing that they could never afford 
the medicine otherwise. “If you had money, you were able to buy it. If you 
didn’t, you died,” Dr. Venter said. “It’s going to be the same thing again.”

Covax was set up to prevent that. It came together with money and support from 
the World Health Organization, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness 
Innovations and GAVI, the Vaccine Alliance. Countries, even those that cannot 
hope to compete on the open market, can buy into Covax and receive vaccines. 
Poor countries pay nothing.

Secret Deals

South African medical advisers say the Covax system is vital but also deeply 
frustrating. Governments must pay up front without knowing what vaccine they 
will receive or getting any guarantees on when the doses will arrive. Covax 
estimates the price per dose but offers little recourse if the cost is 
ultimately much higher. Countries must assume all of the risk if the vaccine 
fails or if anything goes wrong.

During a recent call with reporters, Covax officials called their vaccine 
sharing program “the only global solution to this pandemic.”

“We still need more doses and, yes, we still need more money, but we have a 
clear pathway to securing the initial two billion doses and then beyond that,” 
said Seth Berkley, the chief executive of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.

Pharmacists at the Desmond Tutu center.Joao Silva/The New York Times
Still, Mr. Berkley and other officials declined to reveal their arrangements 
with drug companies, describing them as company secrets. They also did not make 
public the deals they have struck with individual countries.

“They’re agreeing to buy something with public money, and we won’t have any 
influence on pricing,” said Fatima Hassan, a human rights lawyer. “Covax is 
saying the pricing is fair, but we don’t know. Where’s the transparency?”

Those trade-offs might be palatable for countries receiving the medicine nearly 
free. But South Africa is paying about $140 million for its Covax doses to 
vaccinate roughly 10 percent of its population, including health care workers 
and some high-risk people. The government hopes to cover the country’s 
remaining 50 million people through private deals with drug companies.

Globally, the process is secretive, with governments not disclosing the prices 
they are paying for vaccines. When a Belgian minister recently published the 
European Union’s price list, she revealed that prices vary depending on who’s 
doing the buying.

Many South Africans are deeply skeptical of pharmaceutical companies and wary 
of rampant government corruption. The health minister, Zweli Mkhize, said in a 
recent call with reporters that it was essential that rich countries not hoard 
vaccines, but otherwise the government has said little about its plans.


South Africa’s health minister, Zweli Mkhize, said it was vital that rich 
countries not hoard vaccines.Joao Silva/The New York Times
Outraged, health advocates have threatened to sue thecountry’s government to 
make the plans public.

Ultimately, though, money is the great differentiator. From the outset, South 
Africa’s government knew it could not afford to order doses before they were 
tested and approved, as wealthy countries did.

“While these countries have gone on a shopping spree, we haven’t even started 
window shopping,” Ames Dhai, a bioethics professor and member of the 
government’s vaccine advisory panel, told doctors on a recent webinar.

No Guarantee

South Africa has seen this play out before. In 2009, when the world feared a 
devastating H1N1 flu outbreak, rich countries hoarded the earliest vaccines. 
While the outbreak was far weaker than expected, it revealed the inequities 
that exist when countries compete for lifesaving medicine.

One example is the HPV vaccine, a drug that can prevent cervical cancer but is 
in short supply in South Africa. Supplies are so tight that the World Health 
Organization has recommended that wealthy countries temporarily stop expanding 
their vaccinating campaigns to cover boys, so other nations can focus at least 
on covering young girls.

For the Covid-19 vaccine, government officials and advisers say they have met 
with or received preliminary inquiries from most of the major drug companies.

Abdool Karim, the head of the country’s coronavirus council, said the country 
needed to be judicious in choosing a vaccine that best fits the needs of South 
Africa. Rushing to buy the Pfizer vaccine, for example, which requires shipping 
and storage at ultracold temperatures, made no sense when cheaper, simpler and 
more manageable medicines were on the horizon, he said.

But because South Africa did not pre-order doses from private companies, the 
country may have to watch its own domestic drug maker, Aspen Pharmacare, 
produce vaccines for other countries before they are available domestically.


Young South Africans at a nightclub in Khayelitsha, a township on the outskirts 
of Cape Town.Joao Silva/The New York Times
Under contract with Johnson & Johnson, Aspen is expected to produce millions of 
vaccine doses. South African officials have high hopes for the vaccine, which 
does not need cold storage and promises to require one injection rather than 
two.

“We’ll participate in your trials, we’ll manufacture your vaccines, but we 
don’t know if we’ll get access,” Ms. Hassan said.

Johnson & Johnson has promised to sell its vaccines at break-even prices and 
provide half a billion doses to Covax to help poor countries. Aspen’s chief 
executive, Stephen Saad, said he was proud of that commitment. But he 
acknowledged that there is no guarantee for South Africa.

“It’s J & J’s decision as to where the product goes,” he said.

South Africa, which is now past a million Covid-19 cases, is facing its second 
wave. Public health officials are particularly worried about a new mutation 
that they believe may have made the virus more contagious.

In poor and working-class townships, the greater fear is of a new lockdown. The 
government’s earlier aggressive lockdown devastated the economy and confined 
many people to tin shacks built an arm’s length apart, with a dozen families 
sharing an outhouse and many more sharing a water tap.

“It’s impossible to have social distancing here,” said Mr. Mzwamadoda, who was 
selected for the drug trial.


Thosh Mzwamadoda with her son Emihile. She hopes to participate in the vaccine 
trials, but her husband, Mtshaba, fears that vaccines will go to “the people at 
the top.”Joao Silva/The New York Times
He is counting on the vaccine, hoping he got the actual medicine and not a 
placebo. “I want my life back,” he said.

Mr. Mzwamadoda woke up the day after his injection feeling well. He talked it 
over with his wife, and they decided that she would walk to Dr. Gill’s clinic 
and enroll that weekend.

A few days later, though, Dr. Gill got word that Johnson & Johnson did not need 
any new test subjects at her location.

Data was pouring in. A good outcome, but that meant that when people began 
lining up at the gates early the next morning, she had to turn them away.

Matt Apuzzo is a two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter based in Brussels. He 
has covered law enforcement and security matters for more than a decade and is 
the co-author of the book “Enemies Within.” @mattapuzzo

Selam Gebrekidan is an investigative reporter for The New York Times based in 
London. She previously was a data and enterprise reporter for Reuters where she 
wrote about migration to Europe and the war in Yemen, among other stories. She 
has also covered U.S. oil markets. 

A version of this article appears in print on Dec. 29, 2020, Section A, Page 1 
of the New York edition with the headline: Covid Vaccines Expose Gap in Global 
Allotment.


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