SIX MONTHS, 147,282 CHILDREN AGE 5-11 HAVE BEEN INFECTED
At a vaccination centre in the capital Kuala Lumpur, young children sat anxiously with parents as occasional yelps of pain were heard echoing in the hall.
“I feel like the (there are) higher chances of me not getting COVID now and I can go dine out,” said 8-year-old Sophie Lee Ming Qi after receiving the vaccine.
The inoculation programme will add to Malaysia’s success in vaccinating most of its people. Nearly 80% of the 32 million population have received at least two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine, including almost 98% of adults.
About 517,000 children had registered to take the vaccine made by Pfizer and BioNTech as of Wednesday, local media reports said.
In the past six months, 147,282 children age 5-11 have been infected with COVID-19 and 26 have died.
“It’s a great move,” said Lee Ser Wor, a parent of children being inoculated.
“It’s good for them in order for them to be protected against the COVID-19 virus and in doing so, it is also protecting the public at large.”
The New South Wales state government has spent millions of dollars on technology in an attempt to reduce shark attacks along its coast amid public concern, deploying nets at 51 beaches, as well as drones and shark listening stations that can track white sharks by satellite and send an alert when one is sighted.
“It’s good for them in order for them to be protected against the COVID-19 virus and in doing so, it is also protecting the public at large.”