Health

Russia STOLE the blueprint for the Oxford/AstraZeneca jab, security sources tell ministers 


Russia was today accused of using a spy embedded in Britain to steal the design for the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine so Vladimir Putin could create their own suspiciously similar Sputnik V jab and win the race to produce world’s first effective coronavirus vaccine.

Security sources have evidence a Moscow mole in the UK was physically able to grab the top secret blueprint – but it is not clear if this was a document from the pharma giant’s lab or factory, or a vial of the finished medicine then smuggled out of the country for analysis.

Home Office minister Damian Hinds claimed today he couldn’t comment on the case – but didn’t deny it – and said: ‘It’s fair to assume there are certainly foreign states who constantly would like to get their hands on sensitive information, including commercial and scientific secrets and intellectual property’. 

MI5 spies have already said that Russian hackers launched repeated attempts to carry out cyber attacks on Oxford University starting in March 2020 – around a month after British scientists announced they had started developing a vaccine. 

In April last year Oxford/AZ announced they were starting the first human trials – but the following month Moscow said they had invented their own vaccine and by August Vladimir Putin gave a TV address to the Russian people saying the country had won the global race to create the first Covid-19 jab.

It later emerged that Sputnik V works in exactly the same way as its British counterpart. Both are viral vector vaccines, meaning both use another dormant virus to carry the immune agent that then destroy the coronavirus. The timeline of events suggests that Moscow could have taken the blueprint during the first human trials in the UK.

It raises questions about how senior the mole might be – and if they have been caught. Sources told The Sun that British ministers have been told they have evidence that spies working for the Kremlin had stolen the blueprint for the Covid jab from the multinational pharmaceutical company in order to design their own vaccine. 

Tory MP Bob Seely, an expert in Russian affairs, said: ‘I think we need to get serious about Russian and Chinese espionage. Whether it is stealing the design for Astra- Zeneca or blackmailing us over energy by these authoritarian and totalitarian regimes, we need to get wise to them.’

Conservative backbencher Andrew Bridgen said: ‘We know that the UK has the best scientists and research facilities, but Russia probably has the best spies’.

Sources told The Sun that British ministers have been told they have evidence that spies working for the Kremlin had stolen the blueprint for the Covid jab from the multinational pharmaceutical company in order to design their own vaccine.  

President Vladimir Putin confirmed that he had received Russia's Sputnik V shot earlier this year

 President Vladimir Putin confirmed that he had received Russia’s Sputnik V shot earlier this year

Two early clinical trials done in Moscow this year indicated Russia's Covid-19 vaccine was safe and effective. Pictured: Russia's Sputnik V jab

Two early clinical trials done in Moscow this year indicated Russia’s Covid-19 vaccine was safe and effective. Pictured: Russia’s Sputnik V jab

Oxford AZ vs Sputnik: Race to the first vaccine between Russia and the West… and did the Russians steal it during the first human trials?

Timeline

February 11 2020  

Oxford University to develop a vaccine against Covid-19 using data on the virus sent from China.  

April 23

Trials of the vaccine on healthy human volunteers begin.

April 30 

Oxford announces they will be working with AstraZeneca to develop and distribute the vaccine.

May

Russia’s Gamaleya Research Institute of Epidemiology and Microbiology announces that it had developed the vaccine.

It later emerges that it works in the same way as the Oxford/AZ jab – a viral vector vaccine, meaning it uses another virus to carry the immune agent – damaged parts of the real coronavirus, which can trigger a reaction but not cause an infection – into human cells. 

July 17

UK security agencies are ‘more than 95 per cent sure’ that Russian hackers have targeted vaccine developers in the UK.

The statement was made by late security minister James Brokenshire.

August 11 

Vladimir Putin announces that Russia has developed the world’s first effective coronavirus vaccine – and that it has no negative side effects. 

November 23

Oxford and AstraZeneca announce results of their trials, and say that it is safe.

December 30

The Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine is approved for use in the UK.

The claims come just months after President Vladimir Putin confirmed that he had received Russia’s Sputnik V shot as he urged Russians to get vaccinated against Covid.   

In September the results from two early clinical trials held in Moscow and published in the prestigious British journal The Lancet indicated Russia’s Covid-19 vaccine, which uses similar technology to the Oxford jab, was safe and effective.

The Russian scientists behind the studies said the jab stimulated an immune response in all inoculated participants and did not cause any serious health issues.

Production of antibodies seen in the patients suggested the vaccine was able to prepare the body to be able to fend off Covid-19.

Independent Western scientists said the results were ‘somewhat reassuring’ but warned the trials were too small and narrow to justify injecting millions of Russians.

Just 76 people were involved in the study, only half of whom were actually jabbed, and volunteers were all healthy and mostly in their 20s and 30s.

Scientists in the US and UK, who were not involved with the work, said the results were ‘encouraging’ and that the vaccine showed ‘promise’.

However they were still concerned about the quality of the research and of jumping the gun and pumping the jab into people too soon. 

The trials took place in two hospitals in Moscow, the Burdenko Hospital and Sechenov University Hospital.

Participants were aged between 18 and 60 and all deemed healthy with no underlying health conditions. 

In phase 1 of the trial, volunteers were given one part of the vaccine to see if they suffered any negative side effects. 

Nearly 60 per cent of participants suffered some pain at their injection site, while half suffered high temperatures – these are generally considered mild, acceptable effects.

Four in 10 reported a sore head, while a quarter felt weak or a lack of energy and 24 per cent had muscle and joint pain.

All of these symptoms were mild and quite common in many other adenovirus vaccines, so the Sputnik V was deemed to be safe and well tolerated.

What do we know about Sputnik V – and how is it similar to Britain’s Oxford/AZ jab?

The Russian jab is a type called a viral vector vaccine, meaning it uses  another virus to carry the immune agent – damaged parts of the real coronavirus, which can trigger a reaction but not cause an infection – into human cells.

Putin’s vaccine uses an adenovirus, a type of virus best known for causing the common cold, which has been weakened so it cannot trigger illness.

Oxford University’s vaccine candidate uses the same method.

Russia claims the jab sped through early trials on monkeys and humans, known as Phase I and II trials, and was safe and effective at producing antibodies against Covid-19.

But the scientists behind the vaccine have released no scientific data from the trials, meaning the results likely haven’t been scrutinised by independent experts.

The Russian jab has also not been put through rigorous Phase 3 trials, which are considered the only way to ensure vaccines are safe and actually work.

During these tests, sometimes known as efficacy trials, scientists give the vaccine to tens of thousands of people and wait to see how many become infected.

They then compare their results with volunteers who caught the infection after receiving a placebo.

Scientists say this final phase is the only way to statistically prove a vaccine prevents infection.

And because it’s a much larger testing group, the trials can also pick up subtle side effects that may only affect a small percentage of people.

These rare side effects can become dangerous when vaccines are scaled up for entire populations of tens of millions of people. 

The study came after Putin confirmed he had received the Sputnik V jab. 

The Kremlin had previously said that Putin received a two-dose vaccine in March and April, but it gave no further details and did not release images of him getting it. 

But Putin used his annual televised phone-in this June to cast Russia’s four vaccines as highly effective and safe, while taking a swipe at shots that are widely used in the West. 

‘As you can see, everything is in order, and thank God we don’t have such tragic situations after vaccinations like AstraZeneca or Pfizer,’ he said, adding that 23 million of Russia’s more than 144 million population had been vaccinated. 

He continued: ‘I thought that I needed to be protected for as long as possible. So I chose to be vaccinated with Sputnik V. The military is getting vaccinated with Sputnik V, and after all I’m the commander-in-chief.

‘After the first shot, I didn’t feel anything at all. About four hours later, there was some tenderness where I had the shot. 

‘I did the second at midday. At midnight, I measured my temperature. It was 37.2 (Celsius). I went to sleep, woke up and my temperature was 36.6. That was it.

He added: ‘I don’t support mandatory vaccination, and I continue to hold this point of view.’

In July, Russian internet troll factories were blamed for an anti-Pfizer Covid jab smear campaign by a report by the Network Contagion Research Institute.

The paper claimed the aim of the misinformation drive was to promote the country’s own Sputnik V vaccine.

Tactics used by the smear campaign included releasing and promoting negative coverage of Pfizer and targeting specific countries.

The report said one unusual approach saw marketing firms from Russia directly go to popular figures to try and get them to act on their Facebook and Instagram platforms.

It alleged: ‘Russian marketing firms have directly approached social-media influencers in France.

‘Offering financial compensation for promoting fraudulent, allegedly ‘leaked’ stories about Pfizer vaccine complications.’ 

The report claimed that the Russian had also zeroed in on spreading the messages in Brazil, India, Indonesia, and Canada.

This was due to them believing those countries were seen as potential export markets for Sputnik.

NCRI’s paper continued: ‘In a Council on Foreign Relations blog post, members of Novetta, a disinformation tracking firm, revealed that in the Fall of 2020, well before vaccine makers had released any data to confirm vaccine effectiveness, public opinion of Sputnik V in Africa was suspiciously high.  

Analytics company Novetta also found that the Russian vaccine had the ‘second-highest rate of positive quotes (66 per cent) in African media coverage’ and the ‘the second-lowest negative perception (11 per cent)’.  

MailOnline has contacted Downing Street for comment. 



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