Vietnam approves Abdala vaccine as president visits Cuba

Abdala becomes the eighth COVID-19 vaccine approved for use in Vietnam, which has one of the lowest inoculation rates in the region.

Cuba previously said its three-shot Abdala vaccine against the coronavirus had proved 92.28 percent effective [File: Manaure Quintero/Reuters]

Vietnam has approved Cuba’s Abdala vaccine for use against the new COVID-19, the government said on Saturday, as the Southeast Asian country is battling its worst outbreak.

Abdala becomes the eighth COVID-19 vaccine approved for use in Vietnam, which has one of the lowest vaccination rates in the region, with only 6.3 percent of its 98 million people having received at least two shots.

The announcement came hours after President Nguyen Xuan Phuc left Hanoi for an official visit to Havana.

Vietnam has recorded 667,650 coronavirus infections and 16,637 deaths, the vast majority in the Delta variant-driven outbreak from late April.

“The ministry of health has approved Abdala vaccine, based on the country’s urgent need for its COVID-19 fight,” the government said in a statement.

The ministry last month said Cuba would supply large quantities of Abdala vaccines to Vietnam and transfer the production technology by the end of the year.

Vietnam and Cuba are among the last five Communist-ruled countries in the world, along with China, Laos and North Korea.

In July, Vietnam urged the United States to end its “hostile policy” towards Cuba and lift its longstanding trade embargo after rare anti-government protests on the island.

Cuba previously said its three-shot Abdala vaccine against the coronavirus had proved 92.28 percent effective.

Source: Reuters