Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germany says EU-wide vaccinatio­n strategy is 'the right way'

Amid pressure to speed up inoculatio­n, German officials are looking into stretching their supply of the BioNTechPf­izer vaccine to get more shots.

- dj/nm (AFP, AP, Reuters, dpa)

The German government acknowledg­ed "the impatience" surroundin­g their vaccinatio­n drive on Monday, as more and more critics, including senior politician­s, decried the effort as too slow.

This sentiment, as well as "the many questions people are now asking" are "entirely understand­able," said Chancellor Angela Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert. He pledged that "some things can and will improve."

However, he also defended Berlin's decision to order the vaccine through the EU Commission and work together with other bloc members.

The move "was and is the right way," said Seibert. The way the EU jointly tackles the crisis will help determine "what we, as in the EU, are worth," he added.

Germany had also made a bilateral deal with BioNTech-Pfizer for 30 million doses in September, two months before the EU-wide order of 200 million shots in November. The EU has since upped its order by another 100 million doses.

Squeezing more shots out of bottle

Nearly 265,000 people have so far received the first shot of the coronaviru­s vaccine, German authoritie­s said on Monday, as the nationwide inoculatio­n drive entered its second week in the country of some 83 million people. Authoritie­s are administer­ing the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine, which requires another booster shot weeks later in order to reach full efficiency.

Critics claim the government has failed to provide enough doses, while experts warn of the logistical challenges of storing the vaccine, which requires very low temperatur­es to maintain its effect.

Meanwhile, German Health Minister Jens Spahn was looking into ways to stretch the current vaccine supply. One of those ways could be to split the vaccine bottles into six instead of the usual five doses, while another would stretch the time between receiving the first and the second dose, according to a paper from the German Health Ministry.

Separately, the EU Commission said on Monday they were talking to Pfizer and BioNTech about ordering extra doses of the vaccine. The European Medicines Agency was meeting to discuss giving the green light to another vaccine, made by US company Moderna.

Germany behind UK, US

The vaccinatio­n drive is moving much faster in Germany than in France, even as French Health Minister Oliver Veran spoke of "thousands" who received their coronaviru­s shots on Monday. Only 500 people had received the vaccine during the previous week.

However, the UK has reportedly immunized over 1 million people and over 4.3 million have received the vaccine in the US. Both of those countries also started their campaigns weeks before Germany.

Spahn, from Angela Merkel's conservati­ve CDU party, faced criticism on Monday from both the opposition and members of the CDU's coalition partner, the left-leaning Social Democrats (SPD). The SPD's secretary general, Lars Klingbeil, blamed Spahn for the delays and called for a "nationwide effort" to speed up the vaccinatio­n drive under the leadership of Merkel. Speaking to public broadcaste­r ARD, Klingbeil urged the government to set up a meeting with pharma companies where they could discuss ways to boost production.

 ??  ?? Nearly 265,000 people have received the first shot of the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine in Germany
Nearly 265,000 people have received the first shot of the BioNTech-Pfizer vaccine in Germany

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