Geneva:World Health Organization officials warned on Friday that new European Union moves to tighten rules on the export of COVID-19 shots were “not helpful,” and said restrictions mustn’t get in the way of beating the disease worldwide.
The EU’s executive Commission on Friday introduced measures to tighten rules on exports of shots produced in its 27-member countries. The measures will be used until the end of March to control shipments outside the bloc.
The idea is to ensure EU nations get shots they bought from vaccine makers at a time when supplies are limited and production hiccups have emerged.
Speaking at a World Economic Forum event alongside WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus Tedros and Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla, German Health Minister Jens Spahn said: “It’s important for us that Europe is safe, that the world is safe.”
“But if we want to have acceptance for this, of course, we also need to vaccinate … our people. So it’s about the right balance.”
Bourla said seeking an actual ban on exports -- and he emphasized that wasn’t what the EU wasn’t doing -- “could become a lose-lose situation rather than a win for Europe situation.”
Read:|EU tightens vaccine export rules, creates post-Brexit outcry