nytimes.com
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/17/world/europe/as-vaccinations-speed-along
-in-serbia-the-country-basks-in-the-glow-of-a-successful-campaign.html>  


As Vaccinations Speed Along in Serbia, the Country Basks in the Glow of a
Successful Campaign


Andrew Higgins

9-11 minutes

  _____  

The Balkan nation has Europe's second-highest rate of inoculations after
embracing vaccines from all suppliers, including Russian and Chinese.



 

Credit...Laura Boushnak for The New York Times

*       March 17, 2021, 5:00 a.m. ET

BELGRADE - Stained for years by its brutal role in the horrific Balkan
conflicts of the 1990s, Serbia is now basking in the glow of success in a
good war: the battle to get its people vaccinated.

Serbia has raced ahead of the far richer and usually better-organized
countries in Europe to offer all adult citizens not only free inoculations
but a smorgasbord of five different vaccines to choose from.

By contrast, the European Union has stumbled badly in providing shots, with
a disjointed procurement and distribution strategy that bet big on the
AstraZeneca vaccine. That strategy hit a roadblock this week after key
members of the bloc, including Germany and France, suspended inoculations
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/16/world/europe/covid-astrazeneca-eu-vaccin
e.html?searchResultPosition=1>  with the vaccine over concerns it might
increase the risk of blood clots, compounding delivery problems that stemmed
from a production shortfall the company announced in January.

Serbia's unusual surfeit of vaccines has been a public relations triumph for
the increasingly authoritarian government of President Aleksandar Vucic. It
has burnished his own as well as his country's image, weakened his already
beleaguered opponents and added a new twist to the complex geopolitics of
vaccines.

"You will one day erect a monument to me!" Mr. Vucic predicted last month,
boasting that he had secured low-priced supplies of Chinese vaccines by
appealing personally to China's leader, Xi Jinping, for help.

Instead of tilting either East or West in an effort to secure supplies,
Serbia, with a population under 7 million, placed bets across the board,
sealing initial deals for more than 11 million doses with Russia and China,
whose products have not been approved by European regulators, as well as
with Western drug companies.

 

Image

 

Credit...Laura Boushnak for The New York Times

It reached its first vaccine deal, covering 2.2 million doses, with Pfizer
in August and quickly followed up with contracts for millions more from
Russia and China. How much it paid is a secret but, Health Minister Zlatibor
Loncar said in interview, the prices were "much better than anyone else in
the world got."

Opposition politicians doubt this and wonder if the secrecy is a cover for
corruption. But even Mr. Vucic's most vocal critic, the leader of the
biggest opposition party, Dragan Djilas, conceded: "He did a good job
getting vaccines." Mr. Djilas got injected last month with Sputnik V from
Russia.

As a result of its plentiful supplies, Serbia has become the best vaccinator
in Europe after Britain, data collected by OurWorldInData
<https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/coronavirus-data-explorer?zoomToSelect
ion=true&time=latest&country=ALB~AND~AUT~BLR~BEL~BIH~BGR~HRV~CYP~CZE~DNK~EST
~FIN~FRA~DEU~GRC~HUN~ISL~IRL~ITA~OWID_KOS~LVA~LIE~LTU~LUX~MLT~MDA~MCO~MNE~NL
D~MKD~NOR~POL~PRT~ROU~RUS~SMR~SRB~SVK~SVN~ESP~SWE~CHE~UKR~GBR~VAT&region=Wor
ld&pickerMetric=total_vaccinations_per_hundred&pickerSort=desc&Metric=Vaccin
ations&Interval=Cumulative&Align+outbreaks=false&Relative+to+Population=true
>  shows. It has administered 29.5 doses for every 100 people as of last
week compared with just 10.5 in Germany, a country long viewed in this part
of the world as a model of efficiency and good governance, and 10.7 in
France.

Serbia's prime minister, Ana Brnabic, attributed her country's success to
its decision to "treat this as a health issue, not a political issue. We
negotiated with all, regardless of whether East or West."

 

Image

 

Credit...Laura Boushnak for The New York Times

In an interview she said Serbia, which applied to join the European Union
<https://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/26/world/europe/26serbia.html?searchResultP
osition=4>  more than a decade ago, still wants to join the bloc but added
that "regulations in the E.U. are very strict. In pandemic times we need to
be more flexible."

The European Medicines Agency, which regulates what vaccines can be used in
the bloc, started reviewing
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/04/world/the-eus-drug-regulator-has-begun-a
-formal-review-of-russias-sputnik-v-shots.html>  the Sputnik vaccine for use
less than two weeks ago
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/04/world/the-eus-drug-regulator-has-begun-a
-formal-review-of-russias-sputnik-v-shots.html>  - more than three months
after Serbia placed an initial order with Moscow for a million doses, and
two months after rolling them out for general use. The agency has not yet
even started reviewing Chinese vaccines.

Mr. Vucic announced last week that Serbia would become the first European
country to start producing China's Sinopharm vaccine. A new vaccine factory,
financed by China and the United Arab Emirates, will start production in the
fall, he said.

Serbia's readiness to embrace non-Western vaccines so far shunned by the
European Union could backfire if they turn out to be duds. Sinopharm, unlike
Western vaccine makers, has not published detailed data from Phase 3 trials.
Data it has released
<https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/health/sinopharm-covid-19-vaccine.
html>  suggest its product is less effective than Western vaccines.

Many Serbians, apparently reassured by the vaccination drive, have also
lowered their guard against the risk of infection. The daily number of new
cases has more than doubled since early February, prompting the government
to order all businesses other than food stores and pharmacies to close last
weekend.

 

Image

 

Credit...Laura Boushnak for The New York Times

For the moment, however, Serbia is reveling in its unaccustomed role as a
model of efficiency.

Mr. Loncar, the health minister, blamed the European Union's stumbles on its
focus on Western, preferably European brands, at the expense of vaccines
produced by Russia and China. "We are very glad that we could solve this
problem on our own," he said.

Providing vaccines in a country with a population of only of 6.9 million
according to official numbers but probably less is obviously much easier
than in the European Union, which has around 450 million people. Even so,
Serbia has largely avoided the bureaucratic wrangling and geopolitical traps
that have hampered vaccine rollouts elsewhere.

At a time when most countries, including the United States, have focused
their early vaccination programs on priority groups like medical workers and
the elderly, the Serbian government is now offering free shots to everyone
over the age of 18.

Anyone wanting a vaccine just needs to fill out a form online
<https://imunizacija.euprava.gov.rs/#novaprijava>  and select whether they
don't care what brand they get or if they prefer either Pfizer-BioNTech,
Sputnik V, Sinopharm, AstraZeneca or Moderna.

Not all these vaccines, however, are equally available and appointments for
a shot depend on the chosen option. Those wanting Moderna's vaccine will be
waiting a long time: it has not yet arrived in Serbia. The health ministry
in Serbia had no immediate comment Tuesday on whether it would follow
Germany and others and pause inoculations with AstraZeneca's vaccine.

On a recent day at the country's biggest vaccination center, at the Belgrade
Fair, a sprawling exhibition complex in the Serbian capital, more than 7,000
people turned up for appointments. 

 

Image

 

Credit...Laura Boushnak for The New York Times

Nearly all received China's Sinopharm vaccine, which, according to clinical
trials, has an efficacy rate of 79 percent, lower than that of Western and
Russian vaccines.

There were also a few booths offering the Pfizer vaccine and Russia's
Sputnik V but supplies of the Chinese offering were clearly far more
plentiful.

What is available on any given day, said Dragana Milosevic, a doctor
supervising the injections, varies depending on deliveries from a central
government-run stockpile.

"I never expected it to be so easy," said Biljana Stankovic, a 37-year-old
molecular biologist, who, waiting to be called into a vaccination booth,
said she did not care what she was given. She added that she did not share
Mr. Vucic's political views but "I'm glad and surprised that everything is
so well organized."

With the exception of Hungary, the only other European nation to embrace
Sputnik V, European countries have tied themselves in knots over whether to
use non-Western vaccines.

 

Image

 

Credit...Laura Boushnak for The New York Times

In Slovakia, the health minister was forced to resign last week over his
decision to place an order for Sputnik V, which some fellow ministers
denounced as a "tool of hybrid war." Hungary has been widely accused of
breaking European Union ranks and cozying up to Moscow by using Sputnik.

Serbia has taken delight in showing up the European Union not only at home
but in the other states created by the collapse of Yugoslavia. Kosovo, which
put its vaccine hopes in help from the European bloc, has so far received no
vaccines, other than those provided by Serbia, which started a vaccination
program in ethnic Serb enclaves but was ordered to stop by Kosovo's ethnic
Albanian government.

Bosnia has also received small deliveries of vaccines from Serbia, as has
North Macedonia (formerly Macedonia), another troubled new state created
after Yugoslavia fell apart.

The European Union vaccines travails have exasperated Serbians who believe
their future lies with Europe, not Russia or China. "It failed at the most
critical time," said Zoran Radovanovic, a retired professor of epidemiology.

He said he loathed the direction Mr. Vucic has taken the country by limiting
media freedom and harassing critics. But, Mr. Radovanovic added: "Unlike so
many other promises and false statements by Vucic, this is not just
propaganda. Vaccines are something real. We have them."

 

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