In a virtual ministerial meeting on the pandemic, Blinken said the United States had worked with Covax on providing the single-dose Johnson & Johnson shots to areas of conflict and other humanitarian distress.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Wednesday announced a deal to bring
Covid-19
vaccines into conflict zones, where paltry numbers of people have been inoculated.
In a virtual ministerial meeting on the pandemic, Blinken said the United States had worked with
Covax, the international
vaccine alliance to support developing nations, on providing the single-dose
Johnson &
Johnson shots to areas of conflict and other humanitarian distress.
"We're eager for people in these difficult circumstances to get protection against
Covid-19 as soon as possible," Blinken said.
"We know the urgency of this fight. We know what we need to do to stop the pandemic. Now, we've got to do it," he said.
Gavi, the public-private partnership that co-leads
Covax, said that the United States brokered an agreement to waive indemnification requirements on the
Johnson &
Johnson vaccines.
Manufacturers have required governments to pay any legal penalties for incidents from vaccination, creating hurdles for poor nations and especially for aid groups operating in conflict zones.
"We warmly welcome the US government's role in helping broker the agreement between J&J and
Covax," a Gavi spokesperson said in Geneva.
The spokesperson called on other
vaccine manufacturers to join
Johnson &
Johnson and China's Sinovac in waiving indemnification requirements for humanitarian agencies.
Details on how many doses would be distributed were not immediately announced.
More than four billion
vaccines have been administered worldwide, according to an AFP tally based on official sources.
But the vast majority have gone to wealthy countries as well as China and India with inoculation rates minimal in sub-Saharan Africa.
President
Joe Biden in September announced that the United States will donate more than one billion doses around the world to help defeat the pandemic with a goal of fully vaccinating at least 70 percent of the global population within a year.