Indonesia to give Covid-19 vaccine booster to public from Jan 12 as Omicron spreads

Indonesia has fully vaccinated 42 per cent of its 270 million population. PHOTO: REUTERS

JAKARTA (REUTERS) - Indonesia will begin giving Covid-19 vaccine booster shots to the general public from Jan 12, health minister Budi Gunadi Sadikin said on Monday (Jan 3), as the Omicron variant spreads in the country.

Health workers were given booster doses in July and the plan now is to cover all adults who took their second shots more than six months ago. Some 21 million will be covered under the booster programme this month, Mr Budi said.

"It has been decided by Mr President that (the programme) will begin on Jan 12," he said.

Indonesia has fully vaccinated 42 per cent of its 270 million population, using shots produced by China's Sinovac Biotech, Pfizer/BioNTech or Moderna.

Mr Budi told a news conference that the country will need about 230 million doses for boosters and has secured nearly half of them.

The Omicron variant has infected more than 150 people in Indonesia since its detection last month, the majority of whom were international travellers.

Mr Budi said six of the cases stemmed from local transmission in the capital Jakarta, Surabaya, Medan, and Bali island.

Indonesia grappled with a devastating second wave of infections in July, but case numbers have plummeted since then.

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