Dalai Lama alandila katemera wa COVID-19 ndipo akulimbikitsa kulimba mtima

Dalai Lama alandila katemera wa COVID-19 ndipo akulimbikitsa kulimba mtima
Dalai Lama receives COVID-19 vaccine

Followers lined both sides of the road with their hands folded and heads down as the Dalai Lama waved as he was being driven to the hospital for his first COVID-19 vaccine shot.

  1. The 85-year-old spiritual leader said he hoped his example would inspire more people to “have courage” to get themselves vaccinated for the “greater benefit.”
  2. The Dalai Lama volunteered to go to the hospital for his vaccination according to a hospital official.
  3. Ten others who live in the Dalai Lama’s residence also received the Covishield vaccine in Dharamsala, India.

Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, received his first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine on Saturday in Dharamsala, India. He urged others to “have courage” to get vaccinated saying it would prevent “some serious problem.”

“This injection is very, very helpful,” the 85-year-old, a leader of Tibetan Buddhism, said in a video message after the inoculation, indicating that he hoped his example would inspire more people to “have courage” to get themselves vaccinated for the “greater benefit.”

The Dalai Lama received the shot at a hospital in Dharamsala, which has served as the headquarters of the Tibetan government in exile for more than 50 years after a failed uprising against Chinese rule.

India has hosted Tibetan refugees since the Dalai Lama’s exodus in 1959, on the condition that they not protest against the Chinese government on Indian soil. China considers the Tibetan leader to be a dangerous separatist, a claim that he denies.

Dr. G.D. Gupta, an official at the hospital where the shot was administered, said that the spiritual leader “volunteered to come to the hospital” and that 10 others who live in his residence also received the Covishield vaccine, which was developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University and manufactured by the Serum Institute of India.

As of Saturday, India has more than 11.1 million confirmed cases and the fourth-highest virus death toll in the world, after the United States, Brazil and Mexico, at more than 157,000 deaths, according to a New York Times database. India began its nationwide vaccination campaign in mid-January with health care and frontline workers.

The country recently expanded eligibility to older adults and those with medical conditions that put them at risk, but the ambitious drive to vaccinate its vast population has been slow.

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Avatar ya Linda Hohnholz, mkonzi wa eTN

Linda Hohnholz, mkonzi wa eTN

Linda Hohnholz wakhala akulemba ndi kusintha zolemba kuyambira pomwe anayamba ntchito. Iye wagwiritsa ntchito chilakolako chobadwachi m'malo ngati Hawaii Pacific University, Chaminade University, Hawaii Children's Discovery Center, ndipo tsopano TravelNewsGroup.

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