Bangkok Post

Italy slams vaccine delay:

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Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte lashed out at suppliers of Covid19 vaccines on Saturday, saying delays in deliveries amounted to a serious breach of contractua­l obligation­s.

Italy will have to rethink its whole vaccinatio­n programme if supply problems persist, a senior health official warned on Saturday, after Rome was forced to cut its daily rollout of Covid-19 shots by more than two thirds.

Pfizer Inc last week said it was temporaril­y slowing supplies to Europe to make manufactur­ing changes that would boost output.

On Friday, a senior official told Reuters AstraZenec­a Plc had also informed the European Union it would cut deliveries of its Covid-19 vaccine to the bloc by 60% because of production problems.

“This is unacceptab­le,” Mr Conte said in a Facebook post. “Our vaccinatio­n plan [...] has been drawn up on the basis of contractua­l pledges freely undertaken by pharmaceut­ical companies with the European Commission.”

Italy, which is using vaccines by Pfizer and Moderna Inc as AstraZenec­a awaits clearance for use of its vaccines across the EU, says Pfizer deliveries were 29% lower than planned this week and would be down 20% next week.

The head of Italy’s higher health council, Franco Locatelli, told a press conference they were expected to return to agreed levels from Feb 1.

In the meantime, vaccinatio­ns in Italy have slowed to 20,000–25,000 a day from peaks of more than 90,000 about two weeks ago, Mr Locatelli said. Rome has threatened to sue Pfizer. Mr Conte said expected delays in the vaccine by AstraZenec­a were even more worrying, adding Italy would receive 3.4 million doses instead of 8 million in the first quarter if the 60% reduction were confirmed.

He added the heads of AstraZenec­a Italy had confirmed the reduction in production capacity at a meeting on Saturday with Italian Health Minister Roberto Speranza and Covid-19 Special Commission­er Domenico Arcuri.

“Such delays in deliveries represent serious contractua­l violations, which cause enormous damage to Italy and other countries,” Mr Conte said. “We’ll use all available legal tools as we’re already doing with Pfizer-BioNTech.”

The European Medicines Agency will rule on the AstraZenec­a vaccine on Friday and Mr Locatelli said Rome would have to reassess immunisati­on plans after that.

So far, 1.31 million doses of vaccine have been injected in Italy, correspond­ing to around 70% of deliveries, placing Italy second in the EU after Germany. Nearly 40,300 people have completed the vaccinatio­n cycle after receiving the second dose.

Italy reported 13,331 new coronaviru­s cases on Saturday and 488 deaths.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A box containing vials of the Moderna Covid-19 vaccine at the Italian National Institute of Health before the jabs are rolled out across the country on Friday.
REUTERS A box containing vials of the Moderna Covid-19 vaccine at the Italian National Institute of Health before the jabs are rolled out across the country on Friday.

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