PNG and Fiji were both facing catastrophes. Why has only one vaccine rollout surged?

ANALYSIS: Why have two Pacific countries, which share Melanesian cultural connections, handled their vaccine rollouts so differently?

A health worker gives a dose of AstraZeneca to a Fiji resident at a vaccination centre in Suva.

A health worker gives a dose of AstraZeneca to a Fiji resident at a vaccination centre in Suva. Source: Getty

Things were looking very bad three months ago for both Papua New Guinea and Fiji. The two Pacific countries were each looking very vulnerable to the COVID Delta variant, albeit in different ways.

On 10 July, PNG recorded its first official Delta case, and the nation’s health professionals were soon warning the combination of very low testing rates, high percentage of positive tests and an extremely slow vaccine rollout provided a “”.

Fiji was already in the thick of it at the time. After the deadly Delta strain entered the country via a quarantine breach in April, per capita infection rates became the  in the middle of the year.

Daily infections  in mid-July – a huge number for a country of only 900,000 people. The crisis caused 647 deaths.

Fast forward several months and PNG and Fiji are heading in opposite directions. More than  over the age of 18 have now received their first jab, and .
By contrast, PNG is in the grips of a major wave, with  per cent of the total population fully vaccinated. PNG is trailing much of the world.

Why have two Pacific countries, which share Melanesian cultural connections, handled their vaccine rollouts so differently?

Not a matter of geography or vaccine supply

Fiji’s daily infection rate today is , and it’s falling. Less than 50 new cases are currently being reported on average each day.

In PNG, the official infection rate is now  per day, but this drastically understates the reality of what is happening in the country.

Extremely low testing rates simply cannot be relied upon. The country’s own health data reportedly , and Port Moresby General Hospital is now reporting positive COVID  per cent. Like other hospitals across the country, it risks being overwhelmed by the virus.
A Port Moresby testing centre
A Port Moresby COVID-19 testing centre. Source: PNG National Department of Health/Facebook
It’s not simply a vaccine supply issue. At this stage of the global crisis, PNG, like Fiji, has received substantial vaccine deliveries - principally from Australia, New Zealand and the .

In fact, thousands of PNG’s early deliveries went to waste because the health authorities were unable to use them. The PNG government has recently made the best of a bad situation by .

We can also set aside any suggestion Australia, as the major regional donor, is somehow favouring one country over the other.

 has put a high priority on providing vaccines to both countries in recent months. Its assistance has also extended to education and logistical efforts, along with targeted medical emergency teams and support for .

Nor is it really a matter of distribution.
PNG’s geography does present some challenging physical barriers to distributing vaccines - its legendary mountainous terrain and the remoteness of many of its inhabitants are well known.

But companies from Digicel to South Pacific Brewery manage to penetrate the most inaccessible areas with their products despite these difficulties. And the authorities manage to deliver the vote across the nation every five years in what is one of the world’s most extraordinary democratic exercises.

With its own rugged terrain and dispersed populations across multiple islands, Fiji has also faced  to its vaccine rollout.

The major difference: leadership and belief

We get closer to the problem when we think in terms of trust, understanding and belief.

Fijians have embraced the vaccination rollout almost as one, following the guidance of their  and falling in line with the firm “” policy of its prime minister, former military commander Frank Bainimarama.
Residents queue up for their vaccine dose outside a vaccination centre in Suva.
Fiji residents queue up outside a vaccination centre in Suva. Source: Getty
In PNG, the term “vaccine hesitancy” understates the problem. One  showed worrying low willingness to take the vaccine, and another  showed a mere 6 per cent wanted it.

, and any politician who speaks out in favour of vaccination risks a political backlash. Strong efforts are now being made to overcome this problem, with the health authorities preparing a fresh approach and iconic figures such as rugby star 

These dramatically contrasting pictures cannot be explained fully through differences in education standards, or the quality of medical advice and attention.

To be sure, Fiji leads PNG in these respects – Fiji has 99 per cent literacy compared to just over 63 per cent in PNG, according to the latest available figures. And while Fiji’s medical system has its challenges,  due to chronic lack of investment puts it in a very different category.

In PNG, trust in leadership has flagged following decades of frustration with growing wealth inequality and concerns over governance and transparency.
A months old baby was concerningly among those who have been recorded as positive cases in this outbreak.
A health worker administers a COVID-19 test in Papua New Guinea. Source: AFP
Rather than trust official sources, , and are thus vulnerable to the dangerous nonsense peddled by the anti-vaccination movement in the west.

I know how quickly Papua New Guineans tap into what’s happening in neighbouring Australia, too. They will have seen how the public debate here has dented confidence in the AstraZeneca brand – the mainstay of their own vaccine supply.

But perhaps most troubling of all is the sense that many Papua New Guineans have developed a fatalistic belief that COVID is  to add to the litany of other serious problems facing the country, among them maternal mortality, malaria and tuberculosis.

It’s almost as if they believe this is all somehow PNG’s lot. But it doesn’t need to be.
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Ian Kemish is a former Australian diplomat, serving as high commissioner to PNG from 2010 to 2013. He currently chairs the Kokoda Track Foundation, which receives some funding from the Australian Government for its work to combat COVID-19 in PNG, and is Pacific representative for the World Bank's Global Partnership for Education. He is a non-resident fellow with the Lowy Institute's Pacific program.


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6 min read
Published 12 October 2021 7:56pm
By Ian Kemish
Source: The Conversation


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