After weeks of tensions over Covid vaccine supplies, the UK and the European Union have said they are working together to improve their relationship, to “create a win-win situation and expand vaccine supply for all”.
The EU’s Internal Market Commissioner Thierry said that the disputes were with AstraZeneca, not the UK. “I know that there’s some tension… but as long as we have transparency, I think [relations] will be able to be normalised,” he said.
Some 19 EU countries have reported a rise in infections, giving their vaccine rollout an even greater urgency,The joint UK-EU statement said that “openness and global co-operation” would be key to tackling the pandemic.
“We are all facing the same pandemic and the third wave makes co-operation between the EU and UK even more important,” it said. “We will continue our discussions.”
EU Health Commissioner Stella Kyriakides rejected any notion of punishing the UK. “We’re dealing with a pandemic and this is not seeking to punish any countries,” she said.
Responding to the question of whether the UK might retaliate, Mr Johnson told MPs he did not believe “that blockades of either vaccines or of medicines, of ingredients for vaccines” would be “sensible”. It is possible that companies might draw conclusions about future investments “in countries where arbitrary blockades are imposed”, he added.
The EU’s Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton insisted the contention was with AstraZeneca and not the UK government. “I know that there’s some tension… but as long as we have transparency, I think [relations] will be able to be normalised,” he said.
Had AstraZeneca supplied the 120 million doses to the EU as was agreed, its member states would have achieved the same vaccination rates as the UK: “We have been heavily penalised and we just want to understand why”.
Source: BBC News