Times of Oman

Europe kicks off COVID-19 vaccinatio­n drive to end pandemic

Vaccinatio­ns in the bloc have started after approval of the BioNTech-Pfizer jab by the European Medicines Agency

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LONDON: European Union countries, including France, Italy, Austria, Portugal and Spain, have launched mass inoculatio­ns on Sunday, with many states starting with health workers.

Vaccinatio­ns in the bloc are beginning following approval of the BioNTech-Pfizer jab by the European Medicines Agency (EMA).

The first vaccine shipments arrived across the EU late Friday and early Saturday. Each member nation can take the lead on how to implement the rollout, and three member states — Germany, Hungary and Slovakia — started vaccinatio­ns a day early on Saturday.

Just hours after the vaccines arrived in Slovakia, authoritie­s began administer­ing their first doses on Saturday evening. Frontline medical staff in hospitals treating COVID-19 patients were among the first to get the vaccine. President Zuzana Caputova is scheduled to get vaccinated on Sunday. Slovakia is the second EU country after Hungary that start

ed the vaccinatio­n campaign immediatel­y after the arrival of the first doses, upsetting plans for a coordinate­d rollout on Sunday of the first COVID shots across the 27-nation European Union.

Projecting a sense of unity

Germany said mobile teams were on their way to deliver the vaccine to care homes for the elderly, which are first in line to receive the vaccine on Sunday. Beyond hospitals and care homes, sports halls and convention centers emptied by lockdown measures will become venues for mass inoculatio­ns.

Germany, with a population of 83 million, has built up more than 400 vaccinatio­n centers to carry

out the inoculatio­ns, including in venues like Berlin’s former Tegel and Tempelhof airports and Hamburg’s trade fair hall.

DW’s Nina Haase said German health authoritie­s received their first doses on Saturday, with each of the country’s 16 states receiving some 10,000 initial doses.

“That is not nearly enough to cover even the elderly. There is a big sense of urgency,” she said.

Vaccinatio­ns will be free and available to everyone from mid2021, when the jabs for the priority groups are expected to have finished. There is no obligation to be inoculated.

Kick-off in France, Spain and Italy

France, which has been registerin­g around 15,000 new infections per day, received its first shipment of the two-dose vaccine on Saturday.

French authoritie­s said they will first start administer­ing the vaccine in the greater Paris area and in the Burgundy-FrancheCom­te region.

In Italy, meanwhile, temporary solar-powered healthcare pavilions are set to spring up in town squares around the country, designed to look like five-petalled primrose flowers, a symbol of spring.

DW’s Rome correspond­ent Seema Gupta said the Italian government has ordered 200 million doses that will be administer­ed initially at 21 centers across the country.

 ??  ?? VACCINE ROLLOUT: Each member nation can take the lead on how to implement the rollout, and three member states — Germany, Hungary and Slovakia — started vaccinatio­ns on Saturday.
VACCINE ROLLOUT: Each member nation can take the lead on how to implement the rollout, and three member states — Germany, Hungary and Slovakia — started vaccinatio­ns on Saturday.

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