CARACAS, (Reuters) – Venezuela has received a shipment of the Russian-made Sputnik-V vaccine against the coronavirus, Vice President Delcy Rodriguez said yesterday.
The delivery is the first in Latin America and will allow Venezuela to participate in clinical trials of the vaccine, Rodriguez said in a televised statement from the country’s main airport.
“This cooperation for the Sputnik-V vaccine was the result of the permanent contact, the meetings, the close cooperation that exists between Venezuela and Russia,” Rodriguez said.
Health Minister Carlos Alvarado said 2,000 people will participate in a trial that begins this month in Caracas.
The Russian Direct Investment Fund, the sovereign wealth fund that is backing the vaccine’s development, says it has received orders for more than 1.2 billion doses of the vaccine for 2020 and 2021.
“The vaccine will help the people of Venezuela in their fight against coronavirus and we ready to support other partners in the region,” the fund’s chief executive, Kirill Dmitriev, said in a statement yesterday.
President Nicolas Maduro in September proposed administering Russian coronavirus vaccines to nearly 15,000 candidates in upcoming legislative elections so that they can campaign safely.
Venezuela has strengthened diplomatic ties with Russia amid an aggressive sanctions program by the United States meant to force Maduro from office.