Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal said on Thursday that the states left to compete and fight with one another in the international market for COVID vaccines portrays a “bad” image of India.
The Centre should procure the vaccines on behalf of the states, he said in the backdrop of a shortage of the vaccine doses in Delhi, and many other states.
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“Indian states left to compete/fight with each other in international market. UP fighting Maha, Maha fighting Orissa, Orissa fighting Delhi. Where is ‘India’? Portrays such a bad image of India. India, as one country, shud procure vaccines on behalf of all Indian states (sic),” the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) supremo said in a tweet.
In another tweet, he said India approaching the vaccine-manufacturing countries will have much more bargaining power rather than the states doing it individually. The Indian government has much more diplomatic space to negotiate with such countries, the chief minister added.
His deputy Manish Sisodia had earlier said Delhi will float a global tender for vaccines while accusing the BJP-led Centre of forcing the states to do so.
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Around 100 vaccination centers have been closed down in Delhi as they ran out of their Covaxin stocks.
Sisodia alleged on Wednesday that Bharat Biotech, which manufactures Covaxin, has refused to provide “additional” doses of the vaccine to Delhi under instructions from officials of the central government.
The city government had placed orders for 67 lakh doses of Covishield and Covaxin each on April 26, he said.