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Now Russia claims their ridiculed Covid vaccine is also 90% effective an hour after Pfizer’s jab breakthrough

RUSSIA has claimed that its coronavirus vaccine is 90 per cent effective just hours after Pfizer gave the same figure for its breakthrough jab.

Moscow's ridiculed Sputnik V jab was approved in August before human trials were completed but the news from Pfizer is considered to be the first step towards the development of an effective vaccine.

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The Russian health ministry claims its own Sputnik V jab was 'equally effective'Credit: PA:Press Association
Vladimir Putin didn't want to be outshone on the day Pfizer revealed that its own jab was 90 per cent effective against Covid-19Credit: Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

Pfizer revealed that its jab was 90 per cent effective at preventing Covid - on what experts described as a "great day for humanity".

Not to be outshone, Russia's health ministry has now claimed its own vaccine is just as effective.

"We are responsible for monitoring the effectiveness of the Sputnik V vaccine among citizens who have received it as part of the mass vaccination programme," said Oksana Drapkina, the head of an official research institute. 

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"Based on our observations, it is also more than 90 per cent. The appearance of another effective vaccine - this is good news for everyone."

It's claimed that the vaccine would provide immunity for two years.

But, Sputnik V, named in honour of the Space Race, has been described as "half-baked" and experts have branded the vaccine as a "little better than water".

When the vaccine was released in August, the announcement was met with raised eyebrows by many around the world after Phase 3 trials were seemingly skipped in a bid to rush it out.

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Russia's Sputnik jab has been described as 'half-baked' by experts

Unlike Sputnik V, Pfizer's announcement today is based on results from Phase 3 trials.

One expert blasted Russia for damaging trust in vaccines with its "pork-barrel vaccine nationalism".

Dr Ohid Yaqub, senior lecturer at the Science Policy Research Unit at the University of Sussex, told The Sun in August: “I would hope that other countries are not drawn into such pork-barrel vaccine nationalism.

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