EU leaders confront limits of powers to fight
coronavirus
Video summit highlights gulf between aspirations and
reality.
BY DAVID M.
HERSZENHORN
February
26, 2021 12:45 am
A year into
the pandemic, European citizens are suffering from full-blown coronavirus
fatigue, top EU leaders said Thursday, and the leaders themselves seem rather
exhausted as their own efforts to manage the crisis repeatedly get thwarted or
delayed.
After a
long videoconference, EU heads of state and government said they had reached a
consensus on creating a standard digital "vaccine certificate" that
theoretically should help ease border restrictions and revive travel. But
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said there are still
numerous scientific, technical and political obstacles, including the inability
of leaders to agree on the basic issue of what exactly the certificates will be
used for.
From a
technical standpoint, it will take three months to develop the new technology,
von der Leyen said, and that seemed just as well given a bigger logistical
problem: Even now, very few people in the EU are actually getting vaccinated,
and the leaders don't have any immediate ability to fix that.
The
inability to quickly ramp up vaccinations was by far the most frustrating issue
that leaders confronted during the meeting. So far, only 6.4 percent of the
EU's population has received a vaccine, von der Leyen said at a news conference
— or 8 percent if children and teenagers are excluded, she added, in a rather
unsuccessful effort to stretch the statistic as far as it might go.
All in all,
leaders acknowledged a rather bleak situation over which they have extremely
limited control.
"I
think we have to face the truth that there is indeed a difficult
situation," European Council President Charles Michel said at a news
conference following the tele-summit. "There is considerable pressure in
all our member states and our people have great expectations of us, that they
will be able to recover an ability to live freely. And of course there is all
this impact on the economy and the social situation. We know that the next few
weeks will continue to be difficult as far as vaccinations are concerned."
Vaccine
production is projected to steadily increase in the next few months, but there
is little that the leaders or even the manufacturers themselves can do to speed
things up in the short term. New factories can't be built overnight. Existing
manufacturing facilities can't be repurposed easily. Basic ingredients, like
crucially-needed lipids, are in short supply.
So while
leaders on Thursday applauded the Commission's creation of a new task force led
by Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Breton, and while they adopted a joint
statement proclaiming a need to "urgently accelerate the authorisation,
production and distribution of vaccines, as well as vaccination," there
was nothing concrete they could do.
"We
have to go faster, much faster," Italy's new prime minister, Mario Draghi,
told his counterparts during his first European Council as a head of
government. While other leaders shared the sentiment, after another more than
five-hour gabfest tele-summit, what was most clear was how little power they
have over the situation.
The boiling
over of frustration was also on vivid display Thursday in the European Parliament,
where executives of pharmaceutical companies were subjected to blistering
interrogation.
Von der
Leyen urges vigilance
Von der
Leyen warned leaders and citizens not to falter in the fight against the
pandemic.
"There
is a growing COVID fatigue among our citizens," she said at the news
conference with Michel. "It has been a very trying year but we should not
let up now. Not only does the situation remain serious in many parts of Europe,
but we must also watch out for the variants that are spreading."
She said
the U.K. variant was now widespread, detected in all but one EU country, that
the South African variant has been detected in 14 countries and the Brazilian
variant in seven. "So there is a lot of challenge ahead of us," von
der Leyen said.
In a bid to
ease frustration and demonstrate the Commission is doing its utmost, von der
Leyen showed the 27 national leaders a map of 41 sites across the EU that are
involved in vaccine production, and she said more had been identified that
could join the effort. But exactly how that would happen, or what they would
do, was not immediately clear.
Last month,
Michel raised the possibility of using emergency powers in the EU treaties to
force vaccine makers to share patents or other licenses of intellectual property.
But at Thursday's news conference von der Leyen said that strong-arming
companies would not work and that cooperation among manufacturers would have to
be "voluntary."
Some
countries, like the Czech Republic, are still facing the brunt of a brutal
second wave of infections and have pleaded with other EU countries to
"lend" initial supplies of vaccines. Some leaders brought up those
requests but no decision was reached, one national official said, noting that
the lack of vaccine supplies is a problem for everyone.
The slow
vaccine rollout is far from the only problem.
Last month,
the EU leaders agreed to coordinate on restricting nonessential travel — only
for some countries, including Germany, to impose severe border measures
unilaterally, citing fears over the spread of new virus variants.
"When
it comes to travel, we need to respect the common approach we agreed,"
Michel said. "Non-essential travel may still need to be restricted, but
measures must be proportionate."
But none
other than German Chancellor Angela Merkel defended Berlin's move, which she
insisted had not interfered with commerce despite long queues of trucks at
border crossings and reports that even essential travel was being heavily
disrupted.
“I have
explained for Germany that in certain cases, and we are not the only ones, we
are forced to introduce certain restrictions — if there are either high
incidence areas or mutation areas — but that we will do everything we can to
make the free movement of goods possible and also to let the commuters
work," Merkel said at a post-summit news conference. "But that, of
course, requires additional safeguards such as testing."
During the
videoconference, Merkel did not directly address complaints from neighboring
countries, according to officials who heard her remarks.
French
President Emmanuel Macron stressed that he would not tolerate the new vaccine
certificates being used in ways that penalize young people who have not
received the vaccine.
"I
will not accept a system that conditions access to this or that country on a
certificate. Our young people won't have been vaccinated by end of June,
beginning of July," he said.
For Greek
Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, and other leaders of countries heavily
reliant on tourism, the bigger worry is that the new vaccine certificates won't
be ready in time for the summer holiday season. On the teleconference,
Mitsotakis had urged leaders to reach quick decisions, noting that if
government is slow to develop a system, private technology companies would fill
the gap.
Von der
Leyen was careful not to overpromise.
"This
takes a while," she said of the effort to develop vaccine certificates.
"This takes at least around three months. That is important so expectations
are not too early, too high."
One EU
diplomat said the problem in managing the pandemic was not exhaustion, but
rather that leaders had so few options for solving so many difficult problems.
"More than COVID fatigue," the diplomat said. "It seems [to be]
a COVID trap.”
Jacopo
Barigazzi, Lili Bayer, Jillian Deutsch, Rym Momtaz and Hans von der Burchard
contributed reporting.


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