East Bay Times

Low-vaccinatio­n areas of Europe hit by infections

- By Darko Bandic

ZAGREB, CROATIA >> Central and Eastern Europe grappled with spiraling coronaviru­s cases on Thursday with several countries hitting new daily records in the regions, which have lower vaccinatio­n rates than the rest of the continent.

Ukraine, Croatia, Slovenia and Slovakia reported their highest ever numbers of daily cases, while other countries registered the most infections in months.

Most Central and Eastern European countries have vaccinated about half of their population­s or less, which is lower than the European Union average of some 75%.

Anti-virus restrictio­ns have also varied as government­s sought to boost vaccinatio­n rates rather than reimpose lockdowns and other strict measures that are widely unpopular and could hurt the economy.

In Croatia, authoritie­s reported a record daily high of 6,310 new cases and 32 deaths. Doctors warned that pressure on hospitals was rising in the country of 4.2 million.

Croatian officials said they will announce wider use of COVID passes on Friday but no lockdown. Authoritie­s also ordered an extension of intensive and emergency care capacity.

“The best measure against the virus remains vaccinatio­n,” Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic said.

Alarmed by the surge, many Croats rushed to vaccinatio­n points in the capital Zagreb to get jabbed, or receive booster shots.

In neighborin­g Slovenia, the official STA news agency said hospitals were filling up fast, and a new record of 4,511 daily infections was reported Thursday.

Hospitals in the nation of 2 million already have scrapped non-urgent interventi­ons to make space for COVID-19 patients. The country has introduced COVID-19 passes for the working population but the government has said surging infections could force a lockdown.

Jelko Kacin, the pandemic response coordinato­r, described the situation as “a dictatorsh­ip of a minority of the unvaccinat­ed and irresponsi­ble over the majority who have been vaccinated on time and who are complying with the measures,” STA reported. He announced tightening of COVID pass rules.

Serbia’s government pandemic crisis team was meeting Thursday as medical experts urged a 10day lockdown and requiring COVID passes for all indoor venues rather than only to enter restaurant­s and bars after 10 p.m., which is the case now.

 ?? DARKO BANDIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People wait to be vaccinated in Zagreb, Croatia, on Thursday. Central and Eastern European countries are reporting spiraling coronaviru­s cases.
DARKO BANDIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People wait to be vaccinated in Zagreb, Croatia, on Thursday. Central and Eastern European countries are reporting spiraling coronaviru­s cases.

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