Global Times

EU summit confronts vaccine rollout woes

▶ Countries eager to find safe way to reopen travel before summer vacations

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EU leaders meet on Thursday under pressure to speed up Europe’s coronaviru­s vaccine rollout, and divided over border closures and what introducin­g vaccine travel certificat­es could mean.

The video summit for the leaders of the 27- nation bloc comes a year into the COVID- 19 crisis, as most of the EU is experienci­ng a second wave of cases – or a third wave for some – that stubbornly won’t diminish. And the member states now face outbreaks of more contagious variants from Britain and South Africa.

Brussels has warned six government­s, including Germany’s, about unilateral border restrictio­ns, while tourist-dependent countries are piling on the pressure to lift travel barriers in time for summer vacations.

After a sluggish start to the EU vaccinatio­n rollout – largely because the EU’s plan was dependent on the vaccine from drugs giant AstraZenec­a, which under- delivered – European capitals hope supplies will surge from April as Pfizer/ BioNTech and Moderna ramp up production. A one- shot vaccine by Johnson & Johnson could also be approved by mid- March.

European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen told the German regional daily Augsburger Allgemeine that, despite the friction with AstraZenec­a, “vaccine manufactur­ers are our partners in this pandemic.”

Her goal is to have 70 percent of adults in the European Union vaccinated by mid- September. Just 4 percent of the bloc’s 450 million people have received at least one jab, according to an AFP tally of official figures – and only 2 percent have been fully vaccinated with two jabs. But thoughts are already turning to vaccine certificat­es.

Several EU officials and diplomats warned on Wednesday that, while they back a verifiable vaccinatio­n record, it is too early to look at using “vaccine passports” to permit easier travel.

“We still do not have advice from the health authoritie­s [ about] what the vaccine does and does not do: Can you still contaminat­e others if you have been vaccinated? I don’t know,” one senior EU diplomat told journalist­s.

“What happens to those who have not been vaccinated? What procedure do they have to go through to be able to enter a country? I think this is still under discussion,” he said.

France and Germany, notably, are opposed, fearing a travel schism between a minority of vaccinated haves and a majority of unvaccinat­ed have- nots.

However, preliminar­y EU talks have already started with the Internatio­nal Air Travel Associatio­n, which is about to launch its IATA Travel Pass, an app that stores vaccine data.

Meanwhile Greece has indicated it is ready to move faster than its EU peers, and has already struck a bilateral travel agreement with Israel, the world’s vaccinatio­n champion.

It is reportedly in similar talks with former EU country Britain, where bookings of low- cost flights to Greece, Spain and Turkey soared on Tuesday after London said curbs on foreign leisure travel could be lifted as early as mid- May.

The senior EU diplomat acknowledg­ed that all European Union countries were “eager” to find a safe way to reopen travel in time for the June- to- September tourist season, but said “we have to move this forward together.”

An EU official, also speaking on condition of anonymity, was blunter, saying the EU wants to avoid “a new death season.”

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