Shanghai Daily

China vaccine for EU’s Hungary

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HUNGARY on Tuesday became the first European Union country to receive China’s Sinopharm coronaviru­s vaccine as an initial batch of 550,000 doses arrived in Budapest, the government announced.

The vaccines — enough to protect 275,000 people against COVID-19 — were flown in aboard a Hungarian government plane, which had left for Beijing on Monday, at midday on Tuesday.

“This is an important day for Hungary,” Tamas Menczer, secretary of state for foreign affairs in Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s office, said at the airport. “We are trying to save lives and maintain the economy.”

Orban’s government announced last month it had ordered a total of five million Sinopharm doses.

Hungary’s pharmaceut­ical authority has approved the vaccine, but it cannot be administer­ed until it receives the green light from the National Center for Public Health, or NNK, which has said it still needs to conduct tests.

In another first for the EU, Hungary has already been administer­ing the Russian-made Sputnik V vaccine — named after the Soviet-era satellite — which has been found to be 91.6 percent effective against symptomati­c COVID-19 cases.

Orban said last Friday that if Hungary can also start using the Sinopharm vaccine “in the near future, more than 2.5 million people can be inoculated by Easter.”

The prime minister

has repeatedly criticized Brussels’ authorizat­ion and procuremen­t of vaccines as too slow.

“Each day we spend waiting around for Brussels, we would lose 100 Hungarian lives,” Orban said.

The European Medicines Agency is under pressure to approve new coronaviru­s vaccines as quickly as possible, as the EU’s 27 member states grapple with delivery delays and shortages in supplies for the top three vaccines authorized in the EU — Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and AstraZenec­a-Oxford.

Meanwhile Hungary’s neighbor, non-EU member Serbia, is also using Chinese and Russian vaccines and is ahead of the EU in the pace of its vaccinatio­n program.

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