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As 3rd Coronavirus Wave Forces Europe Into Lockdown, Vaccine Success Sees
Britain Reopen

Henry Ridgwell

   LONDON - Much of Europe has been forced back into lockdown amid a
   deadly third wave of the coronavirus. In Britain however, pubs, shops
   and services reopened Monday as the government hailed its vaccination
   program for cutting infections.

   In Rome, around 200restaurant and business owners staged a protest
   Monday outside parliament, demanding that the Italian government allows
   them to reopen.
   Restaurant and small-business owners take part in a protest calling for
   their businesses to be allowed to reopen, despite no authorization for
   the demonstration by the government, amid the coronavirus outbreak, in
   Rome, Italy, Apr. 12, 2021.

   Lockdown measures, which were originally meant to expire Monday April
   12, were extended until May 3 amid a resurgence in coronavirus
   infections.

   "We call on the government to open immediately, respecting the rules
   and protocols which they have given us several months ago and which we
   have spent money investing in," said Saviano Raffaele of the Tuscany
   Trade Union Association, attending the protest in Rome Monday. "We are
   tired of this, we need to return to work, we just can't do it anymore,"
   said a restaurant owner from the northern Veneto region, who did not
   want to be named.

   Italy has recorded almost 19,000 deaths from the virus since its latest
   outbreak came to light on February 21, more than any other country. It
   is one of several European countries struggling with a third wave of
   the virus.
   FILE - Medical staff work in the intensive care unit where COVID-19
   patients are treated at Cambrai hospital, France, March 25, 2021.

   France, Germany and several other states have extended lockdowns, and
   German doctors warn that more young people are being hospitalized with
   the virus.

   Chancellor Angela Merkel issued a stark warning Monday. "The number of
   infections is currently far too high," Merkel said in a video message
   at the opening of the trade fair Hannover Messe. "The use of intensive
   care units in our hospitals is increasing again and we have to say that
   this third wave might turn out to be the toughest for us. And to break
   it, of course, the most important weapon we have is the vaccine."

   The European surge is driven by the so-called B.1.1.7 variant of the
   virus, first identified in Britain, which was hit hard in January and
   forced back into lockdown.

   However, Britain is now bucking the European trend. Pubs, shops and
   services such as gyms and hair salons reopened Monday, as
   hospitalizations have fallen to levels last seen in the summer. More
   than 60 percent of British adults have received a first dose of vaccine
   and the government said Monday that a first vaccine dose had been
   offered to the nine most vulnerable groups, including all those aged
   over 50 and the clinically vulnerable. The country remains on track to
   vaccinate all adults by the end of July, as long as there is no
   disruption to supplies of the vaccines.

   Professor Anthony Harnden of Britain's Joint Committee on Vaccination
   and Immunization said the reopening of the economy was made possible by
   the success of the vaccine program. "There is a huge wave -- third wave
   -- of COVID sweeping Europe at the moment, and that's in part due to
   the fact that not a very high proportion of their populations have been
   vaccinated," Harnden told Reuters on April 8.

   "Vaccination programs are complicated things and they do rely on public
   confidence and stopping and starting and changing vaccination programs
   is not an easy thing to do," Harnden said. "And if you do it, it runs
   the danger of losing confidence in that program. And so, we are very
   mindful of that in the U.K. [United Kingdom], so what we are doing --
   we have not been slow, we are being careful, we are being considered --
   and we are examining all the data in absolute detail and then making
   the decisions according to what we see in front of us."
   FILE - Members of the public receive a dose of the AstraZeneca/Oxford
   vaccine at a coronavirus vaccination center at the Fazl Mosque in
   southwest London, March 23, 2021.

   Polls show public confidence in the Oxford University-AstraZeneca
   vaccine in Britain is around 75 %. However, a majority of people in
   France, Germany, Italy, and Spain believe the jab to be unsafe.
   Confusion over trial data led to the vaccine initially being restricted
   to people under-65 in some European countries, but in a policy
   reversal, several countries are now restricting the vaccine to older
   age groups, after cases of rare blood clots emerged among younger
   people.

   Scientists say the AstraZeneca vaccine remains safe and highly
   effective. "These (blood clots) are very rare events. They still exist,
   but we need to balance that against the risk of developing COVID or
   developing severe disease or even dying from COVID," said Doctor Peter
   Drobac, a global health expert at the University of Oxford, who was not
   involved in the development of the vaccine. "And in most places and for
   most people, that is a much, much greater risk."

   Europe is trying to boost public confidence. France's prime minister
   was given the AstraZeneca vaccine on live television March 19.

   After a slow start, inoculation programs are gaining speed across
   Europe, using vaccines from Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna, AstraZeneca and
   Janssen. Germany gave a record 720,000 doses in one day last week, and
   France administered over half a million doses the same day. Mass
   vaccination centres have opened at sports stadiums in France and Spain.

   "Vaccines are such an important part of the endgame, but we can't
   necessarily vaccinate our way out of a surge," Drobac added. "And so,
   the vaccination campaign needs to be done aggressively, but also needs
   to be balanced with other measures to keep the virus in check: masking,
   social distancing, some of the restrictions on our activities, and of
   course, testing contact tracing and isolation."

   Europe's troubled rollout of the AstraZeneca vaccine has implications
   beyond its own borders, as global public confidence in the drug appears
   to be falling. The AstraZeneca shot is cheaper and easier to produce
   than other vaccines, and can be kept at normal refrigerator
   temperatures, notes Drobac. "That makes it very easy to transport and
   to store, even to last mile communities around the world. And so, for
   all of those reasons, I think this vaccine is of utmost importance.
   It's kind of the backbone of the global vaccination campaign."

   Drobac fears that some vaccines are being perceived as "inferior,"
   while others that are seen as more effective could be hoarded by richer
   countries. "That kind of 'vaccine apartheid' if you will, I think could
   be really difficult, and I do worry about it undermining confidence in
   low- and middle-income countries where, of course, vaccine uptake is
   going to be very important."

   The African Union last week cancelled plans to procure the AstraZeneca
   vaccine, citing a desire to diversify its options. The bloc said the
   decision was unrelated to concerns over blood clots. Health experts say
   it could further fuel vaccine hesitancy, and they are calling for
   global awareness campaigns to counter misinformation.