The Philippine Star

Global COVID-19 jabs exceed 500 million

Europe vaccine feuds deepen

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PARIS (AFP) – Health officials have rolled out more than 500 million COVID-19 vaccine doses around the world, according to an AFP tally on Friday, as European rows over hoarding and supply issues escalated dramatical­ly.

Despite the huge effort to get jabs into arms, the pandemic is still surging in Europe and Latin America, where Brazil has now passed 300,000 deaths and Mexico, 200,000.

The rollout of vaccines is chronicall­y unequal, with the United States accounting for more than a quarter of the global total and poorer nations lagging far behind richer ones.

European Union countries are also still struggling to get their inoculatio­n drives off the ground, prompting angry outbursts from the top of French officialdo­m.

Following an EU summit, French President Emmanuel Macron said there was a “new type of world war.”

“We are looking in particular at Russian and Chinese attacks and attempts to gain influence through the vaccine,” Macron added.

His foreign minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, later chimed in to accuse Britain of “blackmail” in its vaccine dealings with the EU.

Moscow, whose Sputnik V shot is being rolled out in numerous countries across the world, however, quickly rebuffed Macron’s outburst, with Kremlin officials saying they “absolutely disagree.”

In a sign of Europe’s deepening divisions, Germany said it would be happy to use Sputnik V if it gets approval from EU regulators.

Germany also said it has classified France as a high-risk zone, which means travelers need to show a negative COVID test and quarantine upon arrival.

With more than 2.7 million people dead from a virus that first emerged in China in late 2019, leaders everywhere are under pressure to get jabs into arms.

An AFP tally of global vaccinatio­ns showed more than 508 million had been administer­ed by Friday, with 133 million in the US and 91 million in India.

Infections, however, continue to rise at a worrying rate, with more than half a million cases recorded worldwide in just the last week, according to data.

Vaccines cannot come quickly enough to Brazil, which is suffering unsparingl­y from an outbreak that has now killed more than 300,000 from 12 million infections.

The political heat was turned up on President Jair Bolsonaro last Friday when his predecesso­r accused him of presiding over the “biggest genocide” in the country’s history.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A health care worker shows a vial of the AstraZenec­a COVID-19 vaccine in Baghdad, Iraq yesterday.
REUTERS A health care worker shows a vial of the AstraZenec­a COVID-19 vaccine in Baghdad, Iraq yesterday.

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