Merkel is committed to stepping up German covide vaccinations in April

Chancellor Angela Merkel

Photographer: Fabrizio Bensch / AFP / Getty Images

Chancellor Angela Merkel has said Germany will step up its Covid-19 vaccination effort, trying to recover after a temporary shutdown. AstraZeneca Plc’s blow due to concerns about blood clots.

While Europe is facing a resurgence of the virus from France to the Czech Republic, Merkel presented a perspective on overcoming the crisis, while signaling that Germany may have to withdraw some of its previous relaxation. Three available vaccines and the expected arrival of a Johnson & Johnson shot will help, she said.

“Starting in April, we want to become faster and more flexible, and we will be able to do that,” Merkel told reporters in Berlin on Friday after talks with German state leaders. “We want to complete the German proverbial meticulously with increased flexibility.”

Like many of his European colleagues, Merkel faces challenges on several fronts. For the time being, it is caught between the European Union’s vaccination troubles, the public’s dissatisfaction with its response to the pandemic and the resurgence of cases after Germany eased the blocking restrictions. Support for his ruling party bloc fell to its lowest level in a year in a poll this week.

On Monday, Merkel and state leaders will discuss whether restrictions in Europe’s largest economy should be extended to April or even tightened, rather than eased, as the government suggested earlier this month. Covid-19 cases in Germany rose the most on Thursday in two months.

“We see an exponential increase” in cases, Merkel said on Friday. “Unfortunately we will have to use the emergency brake.”

There and back

Countries across Europe have suspended and re-established the use of the Astra vaccine

Source: Bloomberg


Europe’s effort to speed up its Covid-19 vaccination campaign faces the challenge of restoring public confidence after a chaotic week of vaccine suspensions, health scares and threats to ban exports.

EU officials are trying to look ahead in the second quarter, when vaccine deliveries are expected to end quickly. On Thursday, the EU drug regulator made everything clear for the AstraZeneca shooting after reports linked it to blood clots in a small number of patients.

“Every time you launch such a vaccine for millions and millions of people, there will be events and other events that will happen in parallel in the process,” World Health Organization Adviser Bruce Aylward told reporters on Friday.

“What people are generally looking for is for them to be assessed correctly so that their trust can be assured,” he said.

Merkel addressed the issue of public confidence in vaccines on Friday, saying she was ready to take the AstraZeneca blow.

Sputnik option

Russia’s Sputnik vaccine is also an option if approved by the European Medicines Agency, Merkel said. Although a joint European order from Russia would be preferable, “we should go the German route alone,” if necessary, she said.

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