In pictures: pandemic lays bare inequality at eu’s frontier
In pictures: pandemic lays bare inequality at eu’s frontier"
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At the hospital in the small Moldovan town of Leova, exhausted doctors see no end to the pandemic: cases are rising, and vaccinations have only just begun. The first Moldovan was vaccinated
at the start of March – more than two months after European Union member countries began inoculating their populations – and only thanks to donations from neighbouring Romania, with which it
has historically close relations. The two countries might share the same language, but offer a glimpse at the difference a border can make. So far, non-EU member Moldova has received barely
enough doses for 3 percent of its population, while Romania, an EU member since 2007, has already administered almost three million. “If Romania was not part of the EU, it would certainly
have had a much harder time getting vaccines,” says Sorin Ionita, a political analyst with the think tank Expert Forum. Romania’s liberal Prime Minister Florin Citu has said that the
European Commission’s handling of procurement helped avoid “chaos” in which “the highest bidder” would have received the most vaccines. Advertisement It is part of the reason why Bucharest
has refrained from criticising the bloc’s vaccine rollout, unlike other Eastern members like Hungary and Poland, Ionita says. This conciliatory position “is part of a broader policy of
Bucharest, which, supported by a Europhile population, does not seek a fight with Brussels”, he adds. Moldova, a part of Romania until the Soviet Union annexed it in 1940, remains one of the
poorest countries in Europe and has so far relied on vaccine donations, about 72,000 so far, from Bucharest. It received another 38,000 doses under the global COVAX mechanism to help low-
and middle-income countries fight the pandemic. In total, these donated vaccines would be enough to give about 110,000 people at least one dose, out of a population of 3.5 million. The
outlook remains bleak as “vaccination represents the only chance” to contain the pandemic, says Andrei Malasevschi, the hospital director in Leova, a city of about 8,000 nestled on the banks
of the meandering Prut river that forms the border with Romania. “We didn’t have the so-called ‘waves’. The pandemic only grew and it continues to do so,” he says. So far more than 4,800
people have died in the small nation. At the Emergency Institute in Moldova’s capital Chisinau, one of the biggest hospitals in the country, the number of ICU beds was increased from 24 to
62 to cope with the influx of COVID patients. “It is too early to consider vaccination of risk categories, let alone the general population,” says Adrian Belii, head of the ICU unit and one
of the country’s most prominent physicians. Advertisement If Moldova was a member of the EU, “as a large segment of the population dreams of, things would have been different,” he adds.
While the number of cases continues to climb, Moldova’s pro-European President Maia Sandu said she would try to “obtain rapid access to the Sputnik V vaccine” from Russia, an announcement
that sparked fierce discussions among Moldovans. Disinformation campaigns are rampant, and local media have reported that healthcare workers in the pro-Russian region of Gagauzia refused the
AstraZeneca vaccine, saying they would rather wait for Moscow’s Sputnik V. “We are very politicised. And when some hospitals say that they won’t use a vaccine from Europe because they want
the Russian one, we have a problem”, Malasevschi says. Once vaccines are available for a larger part of the population, sociologist Victor Mocanu believes that mistrust will yield to the
economic need of families dependent on remittances from the diaspora. “The approximately one million Moldovans who work abroad will want to be vaccinated as soon as possible as they won’t be
able to travel without a certificate,” he predicts.
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