Wednesday, 20 Nov 2024

Philippines cheers bishops' offer to help in country's Covid-19 vaccine drive

MANILA (REUTERS) – The Philippines’ health ministry on Sunday (Jan 31) welcomed the offer of the country’s group of Catholic bishops to help in the coronavirus vaccination drive of the government, which is struggling to persuade many Filipinos to get the shots.

The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines has offered to transform church facilities in the country into Covid-19 vaccination sites, and said its members were also willing to get vaccinated in public to help build confidence in the campaign.

“We are happy with the CBCP’s offer,” Health Secretary Francisco Duque said in a statement, referring to the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines.

“Churches really can be alternative sites to areas that lack facility, especially those in hard-to-reach municipalities,” he said.

The health ministry has acknowledged that they face an uphill struggle to persuade many people to take the vaccine shots, on top of the logistical difficulties in reaching 2,000 inhabited islands with precarious health systems.

“We can offer our church facilities to help in this massive and complicated and very challenging programme of vaccination,”Archbishop Romulo Valles, president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines, was quoted as saying last Thursday by the official news service of the conference’s media office.

The South-east Asian country, among the world’s laggards in its vaccination roll-out, aims to start immunisations in February.

It has the second-worst coronavirus outbreak in the region with more than half a million infections and more than 10,000 deaths.

The church remains influential in the Catholic-majority country, although its relationship with the current administration has not been as cordial as with previous leaderships.

President Rodrigo Duterte has repeatedly lambasted the church, which had criticised him over his bloody war on drugs.

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