Vaccine failures cast shadow over EU summit as COVID-19 surges
https://parstoday.ir/en/news/world-i137762-vaccine_failures_cast_shadow_over_eu_summit_as_covid_19_surges
European Union leaders met on Thursday to discuss a coordinated path out of the COVID-19 pandemic as infections surge again in many of their countries, seeking agreement on how to ramp up supplies of vaccines after a feeble start to inoculation.
(last modified 2021-04-13T02:52:40+00:00 )
Mar 26, 2021 00:12 UTC
  • Vaccine failures cast shadow over EU summit as COVID-19 surges

European Union leaders met on Thursday to discuss a coordinated path out of the COVID-19 pandemic as infections surge again in many of their countries, seeking agreement on how to ramp up supplies of vaccines after a feeble start to inoculation.

According to the reports, ahead of the summit, French President Emmanuel Macron spelt out the frustration over vaccine rollouts that are far behind those of Britain and the United States, acknowledging that European leaders had been too timid.

As of March 23, Britain had administered nearly 46 vaccines for every 100 people, whereas the 27-nation bloc it left last year had administered 13.8 shots per 100 people, according to public data compiled by Our World In Data website.

Europe's painfully slow rollout has led to a quarrel with Britain, which has imported at least 11 million doses made in the EU. Britain says it did a better job negotiating with manufacturers and arranging supply chains. The EU says it should share more.

The EU's executive unveiled plans on Wednesday to tighten oversight of vaccine exports that would allow greater scope to block shipments to countries with higher inoculation rates.

"This is a very targeted measure in order to create a negotiation leverage to reach some kind of a settlement between the UK and the EU," the director of trade think tank ECIPE Hosuk Lee-Makiyama said.

But he warned that actually imposing controls could backfire on the bloc.

Despite the row, Brussels and London sought to cool their tensions, declaring in a joint statement that they were "working on specific steps we can take ... to create a win-win situation and expand vaccine supply for all our citizens".

SS