A former vice Chancellor of Redeemer's University, Tomori, said Nigeria had the human resource's but lacks the enabling environment to come up with a Vaccine at this time.
  Oyewale Tomori, Nigerian Professor of Virology, has faulted claims by Governor Ben Ayade of Cross River state on the usage  of anti-bodies of survivors of Covid-19 to create a Vaccine for the Disease.
 Tomori posited that Ayade's solution were contradictory.
  In a trending Video, Ayade, had said that the Government could use the serum of those who have recovered from covid-19 to produce the Vaccine.
  No he's not
  Ben Ayade said PCR is unreliably and shouldn't be used for Diagnosis, but even a lab Technician let alone a microbiologist knows that's such a big lie.
 The Cross River Governor obtained a doctorate in Environmental Microbiology from the University or Ibadan.
 Ayade said ''it is not Vaccines, it is healthy living, i am talking from a sound intellectual and scientific background. There is no Vaccine today; there is no established  approved international treatment protocol.
  However, those people who have recovered, why don't you go and take there serum. If the have recovered, the now have the anti-bodies against the virus, take their serum, do a synthesis of their serum based on electrophoresis and synthesis and mass produce the Vaccine''.
  Tomori described Ayade's recommendation as ''bullshit''
 He said, ''on Ayade, he started by saying it is not Vaccine (that is the problem) and ended up by saying ''make Vaccine's from the serum''.
  ''He Speaks from  both Sides of his double mouth. Then he said PCR is not reliable for diagnosis... sorry to use such a word as bullshit''.
 Tomori also a former vice Chancellor of Redeemers University, said Nigeria had the human resource's but lacks the enabling  environment to come up with a Vaccine at this time.
  He added ''we have the human resources but we do not have the basic enabling Environment- regular power supply, water supply, appropriate communication technology.
  ''Research institutes in the country operate on the ever dwindling annual budget which is irregularly disbursed and often spent with opaque accountability.