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Iran returns vaccine donated by Poland, manufactured in US

Iran returns vaccine donated by Poland, manufactured in US
posted onFebruary 22, 2022
nocomment

Iran said it has returned 820,000 doses of coronavirus vaccines donated by Poland because they were manufactured in the United States, The Associated Press reported Monday.

According to report by Iranian state TV, Mohammad Hashemi, an official in the country’s Health Ministry, said that Poland donated about a million doses of the British-Swedish AstraZeneca vaccine to Iran.

“But when the vaccines arrived in Iran, we found out that 820,000 doses of them, which were imported from Poland, were from the United States,” he added.

Hashemi said “after coordination with the Polish ambassador to Iran, it was decided that the vaccines would be returned.”

Iran is among the countries that has been worst hit by the virus in the Middle East.

However, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei banned the country from importing American Pfizer-BioNTech and Britain's AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines and said that he is "not optimistic (about) France" either.

Iran generally uses the China-made Sinopharm vaccine as well as the Russian Sputnik-V vaccine.

The country has also used its domestically produced COVIran Barekat vaccine, though there is no data on its safety or efficacy.