The Mail on Sunday

... As EU nations row over whose citizens get jab f irst

- By Glen Owen POLITICAL EDITOR

BITTER infighting has broken out among EU states over the allocation of Pfizer’s coronaviru­s vaccine – with France and Germany accused of trying to out- muscle smaller countries in the battle for supplies.

The EU’s determinat­ion to agree a block- wide vaccinatio­n programme across all 27 member states allowed the UK to win the race to first approve the vaccine.

It led EU nations to accuse Britain of cutting corners, with the EU Commission warning member states they should tread ‘very carefully’ if they were considerin­g by passing the EU’s medical regulator, the European Medicines Agency, which it claims is more rigorous and requires more evidence to be submitted than the MHRA.

Diplomatic sources say the larger countries, such as France and Germany, were locked in negotiatio­ns with other member states about which EU citizens should be given priority – and whether the economic difference­s between them will make it impossible to roll it out simultaneo­usly across countries.

Some of the less wealthy EU countries, such as Poland and Hungary, do not have the refrigerat­ion facilities to store the drug at -70C, meaning it could be well into the new year before the inoculatio­ns start there.

It has led to demands within Hungary for approval of Russia’s controvers­ial Sputnik V vaccine, which is undergoing trials despite a lack of publicly available data. A source said: ‘On issues such as the vaccine, the EU is a slow and unresponsi­ve bloc. The discussion­s are proving to be a nightmare’.

British officials said Brexit helped speed up approval because MHRA experts were no longer bogged down doing EU assessment work, so had a greater capacity to respond to the applicatio­n.

When Guido Rasi, the former head of the EMA, claimed that Britain had only evaluated ‘the partial data’, he was criticised by Deputy Chief Medical Officer Professor Jonathan Van Tam, who said: ‘If you’re a regulator who is slightly behind, what do you say to justify your position? Words such as the ones you’ve heard perhaps.’

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