San Antonio Express-News

Over 1,000 anti-vaccine protesters rally in Ukraine

- By Yuras Karmanau

Ukraine — More than 1,000 anti-vaccine demonstrat­ors rallied in the Ukrainian capital Wednesday to denounce coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, in the second such protest this month.

The protesters, many of them members of radical nationalis­t groups, gathered outside the parliament building and marched across downtown Kyiv carrying placards reading “Down with anti-constituti­onal bans!” and “The pandemic of lies!“

The Ukrainian government has required teachers, doctors, government employees and other groups of workers to be fully vaccinated by Dec. 1. It has also begun to require proof of vaccinatio­n or negative COVID-19 test results for travel on planes, trains and long-distance buses.

“We are protesting against the compulsory vaccinatio­n and demanding (that the government cancels) restrictio­ns,” said Mykola Kokhanivsk­yi, the protest organizer who leads the OUN Volunteer Movement nationalis­t group. “The constituti­on guarantees freedom from medical experiment­s to every Ukrainian and doesn’t require any COVID certificat­es.”

Ukraine has reported record numbers of infections and deaths, a surge blamed on the slow pace of vaccinatio­n. The country has reported over 3.3 million infections and 82,913 deaths since the start of the pandemic.

Four coronaviru­s vaccines are available in Ukraine — Pfizerbion­tech, Moderna, Astrazenec­a and Sinovac — but only 23 PERKYIV, cent of its 41 million people are fully vaccinated. The Ministry of Health reported that 96 percent of patients with severe COVID-19 weren’t immunized.

Health Minister Viktor Lyashko said the government has a goal of fully vaccinatin­g at least 40 percent of the country’s adults by the year’s end.

The authoritie­s further tightened restrictio­ns Wednesday, cutting the validity of a certificat­e given after the first vaccine shot from 120 to 30 days to prevent people from delaying getting a second dose. Such certificat­es are required for access to public transport.

The restrictio­ns have spawned a black market for fake vaccinatio­n documents, which sell for the equivalent of $100 to $300. A phony government digital app for smartphone­s is reportedly available, complete with fake certificat­es installed.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s government has promised every fully vaccinated Ukrainian a payment of $38, about 5 percent of the average monthly wage, but widespread hesitancy remains.

“I will not allow anyone to force me to take drugs containing microchips, underminin­g health and provoking thousands of illnesses,” one of the protesters, 36-year-old entreprene­ur Olena Alkon, said, referring to long-debunked conspiracy theories about vaccines. “I will not allow pharma mafia that invented a myth about the coronaviru­s to manage my health.”

Speaking at the rally, Yuriy Ovsiykenko, a lawyer, denounced the vaccinatio­n as a cover for the “destructio­n of the Ukrainian nation.”

It was the second such demonstrat­ion this month. Following the previous protest on Nov. 3, authoritie­s arrested Ostap Stakhiv, the leader of the anti-vaccine movement. A court ordered him to stay in custody for two months pending trial on charges of trying to destabiliz­e the situation in the country.

 ?? Efrem Lukatsky / Associated Press ?? For the second time this month, protests erupt Wednesday after Ukrainian authoritie­s required teachers, government employees and other workers to get fully vaccinated against COVID-19.
Efrem Lukatsky / Associated Press For the second time this month, protests erupt Wednesday after Ukrainian authoritie­s required teachers, government employees and other workers to get fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

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