UK Foreign Secretary Raab Warns EU Against Brinkmanship in Dealing With COVID Vaccine Supply

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UK Foreign Secretary Raab Warns EU Against Brinkmanship in Dealing With COVID Vaccine Supply

Last week, Dominic Raab rejected European Council President Charles Michel’s accusations that Britain had imposed “an outright ban” on the export of coronavirus vaccines or vaccine components produced in the UK.

British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab has accused the European Commission of brinkmanship following its threat to block exports of COVID-19 vaccines to the UK.

On Wednesday, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen made it clear that the EU is prepared to halt vaccine exports to Britain unless the bloc gets its “fair share” of shots from the UK. 

UK Foreign Secretary Raab Warns EU Against Brinkmanship in Dealing With COVID Vaccine Supply

European Commission President Ursula Von Der Leyen looks on as she arrives at the European Parliament to explains the European Union’s vaccine strategy to European Parliament, in Brussels, on February 10, 2021.

Raab told Reuters on Thursday that he thinks the commission’s move “takes some explaining because the world’s watching”, adding the decision “also cuts across the direct assurances that we had from the commission”.

Raab said the UK government was “reliably informed” that Dombrovskis and Borrell “weren’t aware of any plans to restrict lawfully contracted [vaccine] supply to the UK”.

“Frankly, I’m surprised we’re having this conversation. It is normally what the UK and EU team up on to reject when other countries with less democratic views than our own engage in that kind of brinkmanship”, the foreign secretary added.

He was echoed by the UK prime minister’s official spokesman who underscored that “putting in place restrictions endangers global efforts” to tackle the COVID-19 pandemic.

UK Foreign Secretary Raab Warns EU Against Brinkmanship in Dealing With COVID Vaccine Supply

Simon Stevens (R), Chief Executive of the NHS, watches as a nurse (C) administers a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine to Frank Naderer (L), 82, at Guy’s Hospital in London on December 8, 2020 as the UK starts its biggest ever vaccination programme.

The remarks followed Ursula von der Leyen stating that she was no longer prepared for EU-made COVID vaccines to be exported to Britain and other countries that were quicker rolling out their own vaccination programmes.

She spoke as Reuters cited an unnamed European Commission source as saying that Dombrovskis earlier urged the British government “to provide figures on its exports of vaccines to the EU, which we [the commission] look forward to receiving”.

The source asserted that the EU had already exported 10 million vaccine doses to Britain, but had received none in return.

Johnson Rejects Accusations of UK Vaccine Export Ban

Last week, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson lashed out at the EU over its allegations that Britain had banned vaccine exports, insisting that his country has “not blocked the export of a single COVID-19 vaccine or vaccine components”.

He added that Britain should be “proud” of the success of its vaccine rollout so far, as well as the £548 million ($760 million) that London had invested in the COVAX initiative for fairer international distribution of the vaccine.

UK Foreign Secretary Raab Warns EU Against Brinkmanship in Dealing With COVID Vaccine Supply

90 year old Margaret Keenan, the first patient in the UK to receive the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine, administered by nurse May Parsons at University Hospital, Coventry, England, Tuesday Dec. 8, 2020

The UK kicked off its nationwide vaccination campaign on 8 December, with more than 20 million UK nationals already having received a vaccine. Those first in line to receive the shot were senior citizens aged 70 and over, health and care workers, and people with extreme underlying conditions

Johnson’s statement was preceded by European Council President Charles Michel accusing the UK of imposing “an outright ban on the export of [coronavirus] vaccines or vaccine components produced” on British territory.

He also rejected accusations of “vaccine nationalism” against the EU after the bloc faced criticism for its vaccine rollout, noting that he was “shocked” by such charges.

The current exchange between the EU and the UK comes as a number of European countries, including France, Germany, Italy, Denmark, and the Netherlands, suspended inoculations with the AstraZeneca vaccine amid reports of blood clotting as one of the drug’s side effects.

Sourse: sputniknews.com

UK Foreign Secretary Raab Warns EU Against Brinkmanship in Dealing With COVID Vaccine Supply

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