News of a shortfall comes amidst a bitter dispute over supplies between London and the European Union, and a veiled threat from the bloc to use "whatever tool" is necessary to make sure Europe gets its "fair share of vaccines."
Salisbury Cathedral, where a temporary vaccination center is treating about 1000 people a day, in Salisbury, England, Jan. 23, 2021. Scarcity has forced Britain to push back plans to start vaccinating those under 50, a delay underscoring the growing fears of vaccine nationalism.
Image: Andrew Testa/The New York Times
LONDON — Britain’s speedy COVID-19 vaccination program has been dealt a blow by a delivery delay of millions of doses ordered from India, a setback that illustrates the fragility of global supplies and underscores fears that an exit from the pandemic could be hampered by vaccine nationalism.
News of a shortfall that will slow the British vaccine roll out came amid a bitter dispute over supplies between London and the European Union, and a veiled threat from the bloc to use “whatever tool” is necessary to make sure Europe gets its “fair share of vaccines.”
Although the death toll from COVID-19 in Britain now exceeds 125,000, the government of Prime Minister Boris Johnson has outpaced the rest of Europe with a vaccination program that has already provided first doses to more than 25 million people.
But that giddying pace is set to slow as a result of the delay in the delivery of about 4 million doses from India, underscoring the extent to which even successful vaccination programs are at the mercy of supply chains.
That delay, and a technical issue with a separate batch of 1.7 million doses from an undisclosed supplier, has pushed back plans to start vaccinating those under age 50 until May, a month later than many had expected.
©2019 New York Times News Service