-
Netflix to buy Warner Bros. Discovery in deal of the decade
-
French stars Moefana and Atonio return for Champions Cup
-
Penguins queue in Paris zoo for their bird flu jabs
-
Netflix to buy Warner Bros. Discovery for nearly $83 billion
-
Sri Lanka issues fresh landslide warnings as toll nears 500
-
Root says England still 'well and truly' in second Ashes Test
-
Chelsea's Maresca says rotation unavoidable
-
Italian president urges Olympic truce at Milan-Cortina torch ceremony
-
Norris edges Verstappen in opening practice for season-ending Abu Dhabi GP
-
Australia race clear of England to seize control of second Ashes Test
-
Stocks, dollar rise before key US inflation data
-
Trump strategy shifts from global role and vows 'resistance' in Europe
-
Turkey orders arrest of 29 footballers in betting scandal
-
EU hits X with 120-mn-euro fine, risking Trump ire
-
Arsenal's Merino has earned striking role: Arteta
-
Putin offers India 'uninterrupted' oil in summit talks with Modi
-
New Trump strategy vows shift from global role to regional
-
World Athletics ditches long jump take-off zone reform
-
French town offers 1,000-euro birth bonuses to save local clinic
-
After wins abroad, Syria leader must gain trust at home
-
Slot spots 'positive' signs at struggling Liverpool
-
Eyes of football world on 2026 World Cup draw with Trump centre stage
-
South Africa rugby coach Erasmus extends contract until 2031
-
Ex-Manchester Utd star Lingard announces South Korea exit
-
Australia edge ominously within 106 runs of England in second Ashes Test
-
Markets rise ahead of US data, expected Fed rate cut
-
McIlroy survives as Min Woo Lee surges into Australian Open hunt
-
German factory orders rise more than expected
-
India's Modi and Russia's Putin talk defence, trade and Ukraine
-
Flooding kills two as Vietnam hit by dozens of landslides
-
Italy to open Europe's first marine sanctuary for dolphins
-
Hong Kong university suspends student union after calls for fire justice
-
Asian markets rise ahead of US data, expected Fed rate cut
-
Nigerian nightlife finds a new extravagance: cabaret
-
Tanzania tourism suffers after election killings
-
Yo-de-lay-UNESCO? Swiss hope for yodel heritage listing
-
Weatherald fires up as Australia race to 130-1 in second Ashes Test
-
Georgia's street dogs stir affection, fear, national debate
-
Survivors pick up pieces in flood-hit Indonesia as more rain predicted
-
Gibbs runs for three TDs as Lions down Cowboys to boost NFL playoff bid
-
Pandas and ping-pong: Macron ending China visit on lighter note
-
TikTok to comply with 'upsetting' Australian under-16 ban
-
Hope's resistance keeps West Indies alive in New Zealand Test
-
Pentagon endorses Australia submarine pact
-
India rolls out red carpet for Russia's Putin
-
Softbank's Son says super AI could make humans like fish, win Nobel Prize
-
LeBron scoring streak ends as Hachimura, Reaves lift Lakers
-
England all out for 334 in second Ashes Test
-
Hong Kong university axes student union after calls for fire justice
-
'Annoying' Raphinha pulling Barca towards their best
US tycoon opens Africa's first start-to-finish Covid-19 jab plant
US biotech billionaire Patrick Soon-Shiong on Wednesday opened a plant in Cape Town that will be the first in Africa to produce Covid-19 vaccines from start to finish.
The factory should churn out its first vials of second-generation coronavirus vaccine "within the year" and produce a billion doses annually by 2025, Soon-Shiong said.
The plant will be South Africa's third Covid vaccine-manufacturing facility but the first in the continent to make the formula across every stage, rather than producing it from semi-finished batches.
With just 10.9 percent of the 1.3 billion people fully vaccinated, Africa is the least vaccinated continent in the world. This compares with approximately 63 percent in the US and around 70 percent in Europe.
Africa currently manufactures less than one percent of all vaccines administered on the continent, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, speaking at the inaugural event, hailed the plant as a sign of African self-reliance.
"Africa should no longer be the last in line to access vaccines against pandemics, Africa should no longer go cap in hand to the Western world begging and begging for vaccines," Ramaphosa said.
"We will stand on our own," he vowed, "without the shackles of colonial thinking."
He thanked Soon-Shiong, a South African-born and now United States-based doctor-turned-entrepreneur -- for returning "home" to invest in vaccine production.
Born in South Africa to Chinese parents and now a US citizen, the billionaire said the launch was "one of the momentous moments of my life -- this is a homecoming."
- T-cell vaccine -
After making a fortune by inventing a cancer drug, he founded NantWorks, a California-based startup in healthcare, biotech and artificial intelligence, in 2007.
Production at the state-of-the-art vaccine-manufacturing campus in Cape Town's Brackengate industrial area will be a collaborative effort between NantWorks, South African research institutions and four local universities.
"We have now developed this SN (spike nucleic) T-cell vaccine, a second-generation vaccine, and we want to manufacture this in Africa, for Africa, and export it to the world," Soon-Shiong said.
The vaccine is being developed "all the way from scratch", with self-amplifying RNA (ribonucleic acid) drug substance, to "full finish", the doctor said.
Johnson & Johnson has an operational "fill-and-finish" plant in South Africa, and Pfizer/BioNTech have partnered with Biovac to bottle their mRNA vaccine starting this year.
"We want to migrate from just doing 'fill and finish', to wanting to manufacture the drug substance ourselves," Ramaphosa said.
Meantime, a South African biotech consortium is working on a pilot project to tweak Moderna's mRNA formula, and prototype shots could be available for trial this year.
South Africa and India have been lobbying the World Trade Organization to temporarily suspend intellectual property rights so that Covid-19 vaccines are accessible to poorer countries.
The billionaire's family foundation, along with the Rockefeller Foundation, the US National Institutes of Health, the European Commission and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, have raised more than one billion rand ($65 million, 57 million euros) to fund the project.
Soon-Shiong says that another $195 million will need to be raised to develop the new plant, which will also produce cancer vaccines.
The NantWorks project will also work on cell-based immunotherapies that could lead to new cancer vaccines and treatments.
J.Fankhauser--BTB