Iran says US approved its funds transfer to buy COVID-19 vaccines
Iran has won US approval to transfer funds for
coronavirus vaccines from overseas, the central bank chief said on Thursday, as
its daily death toll fell to a three-month low.
Central Bank governor Abdolnaser Hemmati said an
Iranian bank had received backing from the US Treasury’s Office of Foreign
Assets Control to transfer the money to a Swiss bank to pay for the vaccines.
“They (Americans) have put sanctions on all our
banks. They accepted this one case under the pressure of world public opinion,”
Hemmati told state TV.
There was no immediate US reaction to Hemmati’s
remarks.
Hemmati said Iran would pay around $244 million for
initial imports of 16.8 million doses of vaccines from COVAX, a multi-agency
group dedicated to assuring fair access to vaccines for low- and middle-income
countries.
Iranian officials have said repeatedly that US
sanctions are preventing them from making payments to COVAX, to which some 190
economies have signed up.
Iran’s Shifa Pharmed began registering volunteers
this week for human trials of the country’s first domestic COVID-19 vaccine
candidate, Iranian media reported, as a factional dispute appeared to be
brewing over the use of imports.
“We do not recommend injecting foreign coronavirus
vaccines to the personnel of the Revolutionary Guards and the basij (voluntary
militia),” Iranian news outlets quoted Mohammed Reza Naqdi, a deputy head of
the hard-line Guards, as saying.
Health Ministry spokeswoman Sima Sadat Lari told
state TV earlier that 152 people had died of COVID-19 in Iran in the past 24
hours, the lowest number since Sept. 18, taking total deaths to 54,308 in the
worst-affected country in the Middle East.
The fall in deaths comes after more than a month of
night traffic curfews and other restrictions in major cities. Police said
96,000 fines were issued nationwide on Wednesday for drivers breaking the
curfew.
Officials have cautioned that the danger of a
resurgence in infections looms large.
US President Donald Trump pulled out of the 2015
nuclear deal between Iran and six world powers in 2018 and imposed new
sanctions on the country.
President-elect Joe Biden’s coming to power has
raised the possibility that Washington could rejoin the agreement.



