Published: 16:49, June 16, 2021 | Updated: 09:54, June 17, 2021
Chickens, cows, flats offered up in Asia's vaccination lucky draws
By Reuters

People receive COVID-19 jabs at a vaccination site at Japan Bangkok Youth Center in Bangkok, Thailand, June 14, 2021. (SAKCHAI LALIT / AP)

Chickens, cows, paid leave, even a million-dollar apartment, these are the prizes on offer from Thailand to Indonesia to the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (SAR) for those who get vaccinated against COVID-19 as nations across Asia combat vaccine hesitancy.

As more transmissible variants of the virus have driven a surge in cases in Southeast Asia in recent weeks, authorities have started offering chances in lucky draws for vaccinations.

In Thailand’s Mae Chaem district in northern Chiang Mai, where most residents are cattle farmers, authorities launched a cow raffle this month that is proving to be a hit.

Many across Asia have been reluctant to get vaccinated, with widespread disinformation and uncertainty fuelling hesitancy over safety, efficacy and religious concerns

“This is the best gift ever,” said 65-year-old Inkham Thongkham, upon winning a one-year-old female cow worth 10,000 baht (US$320) after he received his coronavirus vaccine.

ALSO READ: Thailand ramps up vaccination amid rise in COVID-19 cases

Now in its second week and with 27 cows to award, authorities say the campaign has prompted more than 50 percent of the 1,400 residents in the district - many elderly and in high-risk groups - to register for their vaccines.

Out of Thailand's population of 66 million, just 4.76 million have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.

Many across Asia have been reluctant to get vaccinated, with widespread disinformation and uncertainty fuelling hesitancy over safety, efficacy and religious concerns.

In the Hong Kong SAR, where the pandemic has largely been kept under control so far, authorities are concerned that low rates of vaccination could still leave the city susceptible to a virulent outbreak.

Shopping vouchers, flights, and a new apartment worth HK$10.8 million (US$1.4 million) are among the incentives on offer in lucky draws there for those who have been vaccinated.

READ MORE: Grand prize for the vaccinated in Hong Kong: A HK$10.8m flat

Some businesses are taking additional steps, offering paid leave for those who have been inoculated. One private sports club, though, is using punishment instead of rewards, instructing its staff to get vaccinated by the end of June or be denied future bonuses, promotions and pay rises. 

This general view taken on May 28, 2021 shows the Grand Central residential building complex (right) in Hong Kong, where a HK$10.8 million one-bedroom apartment has been offered for a lucky draw's grand prize for which all Hong Kong residents aged 18 and above who have received both doses of a COVID-19 vaccine will be eligible to register. (ANTHONY WALLACE / AFP)

Even in countries hit hard by the coronavirus, such as Indonesia, authorities have struggled to allay vaccine fears.

Indonesia has officially reported more than 1.9 million coronavirus infections and 53,280 deaths. Recent studies of blood serum samples, however, show the true spread of COVID-19 could be 30 times higher.

"I was afraid that if I was vaccinated, I would die immediately ... Then there was more worrying news that this vaccine contained pork,” said Asep Saepudin, a 67-year-old resident of Cipanas, in Indonesia’s West Java province.

READ MORE: ‘We are only safe if everyone is safe’

Among Indonesian Muslims - who make up more than 85 percent of the nation's population - many are worried whether the vaccines are considered halal, or permissible, by Islam.

Cipanas authorities say it has been especially difficult to persuade the elderly that the vaccines are safe and halal. As in Thailand, they have also turned to livestock incentives, offering live chickens for each senior who gets a shot.

"Elderly people don't want to be vaccinated for various reasons, some say they want to but don't come, some are even afraid,” said the local district police chief, Galih Aprian.

“So we reward (their participation) with chickens.”

Data from Indonesia’s ministry of health shows that only 5 percent, or 8.8 million people, have been fully vaccinated, far fewer than a target of 181.5 million people by the end of the year.