Re: Thank God We are Out of the EU ...
Originally Posted by
JBR
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I'm just grateful that we have a production company in our own country for the vaccine. If we were totally reliant on the EU providing them we'd be up the creek without a paddle. Then, of course, Oxford University were involved in its development, so I think we deserve our own source.
Oh yes, the EU are showing their true colours again - led as usual by Germany who were told off for buying their own vaccines before EU approval, like Hungary has too.
The German media scare stories of AstraZeneca's supposed low efficacy are no coincidence either, yet funnily enough the EU are almost begging AstraZeneca to put their orders above all others when they haven't even approved it yet!
It looks like none of it will make any difference for the EU, not only because as usual the 27 cannot agree what to do next but because now the world has seen what the EU is doing and it's been covered in media worldwide.
That's not a good look for the EU.
Again.
There's a great piece in The Telegraph which I hope you can read, despite it being subscription-only unless you set up a free trial.
"Spiteful vaccine supranationalism can't distract from the Covid scandal that could sink the EU"
"The EU’s vaccine calamity is spiralling into dysfunctional skulduggery worthy of a banana republic. AstraZeneca’s admission on Friday that it would not be able to supply the bloc with 300 million doses in accordance with its original timetable, has set in motion a startling sequence of events in Europe – from the perplexingly spiteful to the sublimely deceitful."
"The fact remains however, that the EU’s vaccine supply is so vulnerable to hitches at least partly because the Commission woefully failed to secure hundreds of millions of doses of the Pfizer vaccine for member states back in November.
Paroxysms of rage are still convulsing across member states over the European Medical Agency’s heel-dragging. A charitable assessment might attribute the oversight to the EU machine’s brittle fixation with price over supply. But earlier this year France’s Minister for European Affairs was forced to deny allegations that the EU passed up the opportunity to order more German-made vaccines in the interests of French Pharma firm Sanofi (whose vaccine development has since been delayed). This would have raised questions about whether the EU had made corrupt use of public funds and broken competition law"
"The EU’s conduct threatens to merely further damage its credibility. For one, it smacks of hypocrisy. Lest we forget how the Commission berated British politicians back in December for triumphalist vaccine nationalism after the UK became the first country to approve the Pfizer vaccine “This is not a football competition, we are talking about the life and health of people,” European Commission spokesman Eric Mamer castigated at the time. Such pieties now look laughable in the face of EU’s own aggressive display of vaccine superstate-nationalism."
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics...covid-scandal/