From the BBC:
“Covid: EU
starts mass vaccination in 'touching moment of unity'”
The EU has
begun a co-ordinated vaccine rollout to fight Covid-19, in what the bloc's top
official says is a "touching moment of unity". European Commission
President Ursula von der Leyen said on Saturday the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine had
been delivered to all 27 member states. Some countries started administering
the jabs on Saturday, saying they were not prepared to wait another day. The EU
has so far reported more than 335,000 Covid-related deaths. More than 14 million
people have been infected, and strict lockdown measures are currently in place
in nearly all the member states. The vaccine rollout comes as cases of the more
contagious variant of Covid-19 are confirmed in several European nations as
well as Canada and Japan. News of the new variant triggered travel restrictions
around the world last week.
What's the
latest on the vaccine rollout? Mass vaccination across the EU - a bloc of
446 million people - began early on Sunday. This comes after the
European Medicines Agency (EMA) and the European Commission authorised the
German-US Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. The EU has secured contracts for more
than two billion vaccine doses from a range of drug companies. "Today,
we start turning the page on a difficult year. The #COVID19 vaccine has been
delivered to all EU countries. Vaccination will begin tomorrow across the
EU," Ms von der Leyen tweeted on Saturday. "The
#EUvaccinationdays are a touching moment of unity. Vaccination is the lasting
way out of the pandemic," she added. Today, we start turning the
page on a difficult year. The #COVID19 vaccine has been delivered to all EU
countries. Vaccination will begin tomorrow across the EU.
German Health
Minister Jens Spahn said on Saturday: "This really is a happy Christmas
message. At this moment, lorries with the first vaccines are on the road all
over Europe, all over Germany, in all federal states. Further deliveries will
follow the day after tomorrow. "This vaccine is the crucial key for
defeating the pandemic. It's the key for us getting back our lives." Italian
Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio urged his compatriots to get the jabs.
"We'll get our freedom back, we'll be able to embrace again," he
said. Health workers in north-east Germany decided not to wait for Sunday and
started immunising elderly residents of a nursing home in Halberstadt. In
Hungary, the first recipient of the vaccine was a doctor at Del-Pest Central
Hospital on Saturday, the state news agency says. The authorities in Slovakia
also said they had begun vaccinating.
^ Hopefully,
this wide-spread EU vaccination will help open-up the member countries to each
other and the outside world. ^
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