The Pak Banker

EU leaders agree to hold COVID video-conference­s

- BRUSSELS -AFP

European Union leaders have agreed to hold video conference­s almost on a weekly basis to coordinate national measures against the COVID-19 pandemic, as the continent battles a spike in infections. Video-conference­s are less effective for reaching complex compromise­s, diplomats say, though they are more practical at present than in-person meetings that increase the risks of infection among leaders and their staff.

Underlinin­g those risks, the head of the European Commission and the Finnish prime minister have had to leave a two-day EU summit that ends on Friday as a COVID-19 precaution.

"There was an agreement that we would, almost weekly now, engage in consultati­on with each other in terms of best methods and the best approaches to deal with this second wave of the spread of COVID-19," Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin said at the summit on Friday.

Italy's Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said regular video-conference­s would help coordinate moves on tracing, restrictiv­e measures, vaccines and therapies. The EU's 27 nations fought COVID-19 with different, sometimes contrastin­g measures, in the first months of the pandemic. The tighter coordinati­on is expected to avoid a repetition of divisions seen after the first outbreaks.

A certain degree of coordinati­on has emerged in recent weeks and months on some issues, such as vaccine procuremen­t and common non-binding criteria to assess the gravity of the epidemic at national level. But national measures remain vastly different. Quarantine length for those who had been in contact with people who were ill was 14 days across the bloc until a few weeks ago, when many countries began shortening it while others stuck to the global standard.

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