Bahrain plans free shots, Saudi approves Pfizer jab

Dubai - Bahrain has announced plans to give the public free coronavirus vaccines

By AP

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Published: Fri 11 Dec 2020, 10:12 AM

Last updated: Fri 11 Dec 2020, 10:13 AM

Bahrain has announced plans to give the public free coronavirus vaccines, as Saudi Arabia said it approved an inoculation by Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech to fight the pandemic.

Bahrain made the vaccine pledge in an announcement published late Thursday by its state-run Bahrain News Agency.


“A safe vaccine will be provided free of charge to all citizens and residents within the kingdom,” the statement said, without elaborating on which vaccine it would offer.

Bahrain plans to inoculate everyone 18 years and older in the kingdom at 27 different medical facilities, hoping to be able to vaccinate 10,000 people a day. Bahrain has a population of around 1.5 million people.


A week ago, Bahrain said it had become the second nation in the world to grant an emergency-use authorisation to the Pfizer vaccine after the UK.

The Pfizer shots, a so-called “mRNA vaccine,” contain a piece of genetic code that trains the immune system to recognise the spiked protein on the surface of the virus. To be vaccinated, a person receives two shots over 21 days.

Pfizer said that the details of its sales agreement with Bahrain, including the “timing of delivery and the volume of doses,” were confidential.

Bahrain had already granted emergency-use authorisation for a Chinese vaccine made by Sinopharm and has inoculated some 6,000 people with it. That vaccine is an “inactivated” shot made by growing the whole virus in a lab and then killing it.

Earlier Thursday, Saudi Arabia’s Food and Drug Authority said it had registered the Pfizer vaccine “so that health authorities in the kingdom can then import and use the vaccine.”

The kingdom said it based its decision on information given by Pfizer on November 24, without elaborating.

A major challenge for the Pfizer shot in the Mideast remains the weather, however. The vaccines must be stored and shipped at ultra-cold temperatures of around minus 70 degrees Celsius.

Saudi Arabia said its Health Ministry later would announce plans on how it would distribute the vaccine in the kingdom, with a population of 34 million people.

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Photo: Reuters
Photo: Reuters

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