Spain rejects bigger doses gap, Iceland's border plan: COVID bulletin

Aden-Jay Wood

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TOP HEADLINES

  • Iceland's government is to propose tightening some of its border controls in a bid to ease domestic restrictions. The changes, which will take effect from April 22 to June 30, would mean visitors coming from nations with high infection rates would need to enter a period of quarantine.

  • **Greece's Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis has admitted the country should soon return to some kind of normality **because "the health crisis in one way or another is reaching its end."

  • Spain has rejected a proposal to widen the time between the first and second vaccine doses , an idea mooted to speed up the country's vaccination program.

  • The Netherlands will resume the use of the Johnson Johnson vaccine , following a

statement released by Europe's drug regulator

on Tuesday.

  • The potential vaccine developed by French-Austrian firm Valneva is expected to beginits large-scale Phase 3 clinical trials this month , but the company has said it will be "deprioritizing the ongoing centralized discussions with the European Commission" after not making enough "meaningful progress."

  • Denmark's health authority expects to announce its decision on whether to use the Johnson Johnson jab next week , pending further investigation into a small number of reported blood clots.

  • Spain's health ministry has said more people have now been fully vaccinated against the virus than have contracted it. "We've reached a new milestone. Let's keep pushing firmly on with our aim: immunizing 70 percent of the population before the summer is over," Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez added.

  • Finland has said it could begin lifting restrictions from next week as infection rates continue to drop . However, borders will remain closed to tourists for at least the next few months, Prime Minister Sanna Marin admitted.

  • **France's domestic travel restrictions will end on May 3 as the country looks to further ease the nationwide restrictions, **a government source has confirmed.

Spain has rejected a proposal to widen the time between first and second vaccine doses. /AP

ACROSS EUROPE

Ryan Thompson in Frankfurt

Denmark's loss is Germany's gain: 55,000 doses of AstraZeneca's coronavirus vaccine will be transferred to the German state of Schleswig-Holstein, following Copenhagen's decision to suspend use of the jab altogether.

The premiere of Schleswig-Holstein, which shares a border with Denmark, said the doses would be reimbursed "within an agreed time frame."

Denmark is sitting on a stock of around 200,000 AstraZeneca vials, which it will only release at the request of a physician. Authorities announced last week that the nation's inoculation campaign would instead be driven by the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines.

Similar agreements to the Schleswig-Holstein deal are likely in the coming weeks.

Nawied Jabarkhyl in London

From Friday, India will be added to England's travel "red list" after a sharp rise in cases there.

It means travelers from the Asian country will face tougher rules for entry, including a 10-day mandatory hotel quarantine period.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson canceled a trip to India this month over coronavirus concerns.

Meanwhile, all six English football clubs involved in the breakaway European Super League project have said they'll withdraw from the plans.

Hundreds of fans gathered outside Chelsea's home stadium in West London on Tuesday evening to protest the move ahead of the team's Premier League fixture with Brighton.

Many weren't socially distancing, with gatherings of more than six people outside still illegal under current COVID-19 legislation.

02:20

Penelope Liersch in Budapest

COVID-19 hospitalizations have dropped day-on-day in Hungary, with government data showing 8,097 coronavirus patients are still being treated, more than 500 fewer than the day before.

Of these patients, those being ventilated dropped to 925. While another 207 people have died in the past 24 hours.

More than 3.5 million people have had at least one dose of vaccine, with outdoor dining to reopen once that figure reaches 3.5 million.

World Health Organization Regional Director for Europe Hans Kluge is in Budapest today meeting with Hungary's foreign minister. In a joint press conference this morning he praised the country's healthcare system and workers for their efforts during the pandemic.

Toni Waterman in Brussels

For now, the Johnson Johnson vaccine remains in the fridge in Belgium. Authorities aren't expected to make a decision until Friday, after they receive opinions from the Vaccination Taskforce.

The EU drugs regulator said it found a "possible link" between very rare, but serious, blood clots and the single-shot vaccine. But reiterated that the benefits of the jab outweigh the risks.

Belgium's vaccination program has started to pick up pace, but infections remain stubbornly high. New cases had been dropping but flatlined on Wednesday, with an average 3,469 infections a day.

Greece's Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis has admitted the country should soon return to some kind of normality. /AP

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