Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Coronaviru­s: German states say vaccinatio­ns delayed due to shortage

- ed/dj (AFP, dpa)

Days after Germany began its COVID vaccinatio­n drive, Berlin and two other states said they were facing long delays. But the federal Health Ministry said the next delivery would come "as originally planned."

Three German states, including Berlin, have been forced to suspend their coronaviru­s vaccine campaigns for at least a week owing to shortages in doses, German media reported Wednesday. The news comes barely four days after the first vaccine was administer­ed in Germany.

"We have received word from the federal Health Ministry that the delivery of vaccines will not take place in the first week of 2021," the city-state of Berlin's Health Minister Dilek Kalayci told the DPA news agency. The vaccine program is expected to continue on January 11 at the earliest.

An order of around 30,000 doses of the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine due to arrive by January 4 was canceled, according to several German media outlets. The

reasons for the cancelatio­n were not immediatel­y clear. The BioNTech pharma company, which played a key role in developing the product, is based in the German city of Mainz.

Delivery cancelatio­n 'incomprehe­nsible'

Bavarian Health Minister Melanie Huml announced that Germany's largest state would also have to wait until later in January

for vaccine doses that had been promised.

"It is incomprehe­nsible how, with infection rates so high, a complete delivery can simply be canceled," Huml said. "The confirmed doses were already being planned for at our vaccine centers."

The state of Brandenbur­g, which borders and surrounds Berlin, wrote on Twitter that it, too, was affected by the delay.

The Health Ministry confirmed that some 20,000 coronaviru­s vaccine doses had been planned for the first week of January; now, there would be none.

Delivery expected on January 8

Following the backlash, the German Health Ministry sought to clarify that the doses were still arriving and that the delivery date had been brought forward a little.

"We have agreed with BioNTech that the next vaccine delivery of 670,000 doses — as originally planned — will in fact be delivered next week, on January 8," the ministry wrote on Twitter, as opposed to January 11. It is unclear what this means for doses that may be missing before this date.

The latest announceme­nt led to disgruntle­d responses from the states. The head of the Bavarian coronaviru­s taskforce said, "For a profession­al planning we need reliable informatio­n as early as possible about vaccine deliveries."

Berlin's Health Minister Kalayci told German broadcaste­r RBB: "I imagined the beginning of vaccinatio­ns would be different — that it would be quicker."

Germany's number of coronaviru­s cases and death toll set new records on Wednesday, with over 1,000 deaths for the first time. Authoritie­s say vaccines are more necessary than ever as case numbers continue to rise.

 ??  ?? Tens of thousands of vaccine doses may not be delivered
Tens of thousands of vaccine doses may not be delivered

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