U.S.
downplays possibility of sharing COVID-19 vaccines with Mexico
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[March 02, 2021]
By Steve Holland and Dave Graham
WASHINGTON/MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - The
Biden administration on Monday downplayed the prospect of sharing
coronavirus vaccines with Mexico, saying it is focused first on getting
its own population protected against a pandemic that has killed more
than 500,000 Americans.
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The remarks by White House press secretary Jen Psaki came before a
video conference between Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez
Obrador and U.S. President Joe Biden, in which the Mexican leader
was expected to ask the United States to consider sharing some of
its COVID-19 vaccine supply.
"The administration's focus is on ensuring that every American is
vaccinated. And once we accomplish that objective, we're happy to
discuss further steps," Psaki said at a White House news conference.
Biden told reporters that the two leaders would discuss the issue at
the meeting's outset. But an official statement released after the
meeting ended made no mention of vaccine distribution.
Biden has predicted the United States will have enough supply by
late July to inoculate all Americans. U.S. authorities have
administered 76.9 million doses to date, according to the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, enough for 23% of the
population to get the two doses recommended for full protection
under the vaccines that have been deployed so far.
Mexico has vaccinated roughly 2.5 million doses so far, enough for
about 1% of the population, according to data compiled by Reuters
https://graphics.reuters.com/world-coronavirus-tracker-and-maps.
Officials have been frustrated by bottlenecks in supply and raised
concerns that wealthy countries are hoarding vaccines.
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Loprez Obrador said at a news
conference before the meeting that he would ask
Biden to share the vaccines it has. Mexico would
repay Washington once pharmaceutical companies
have delivered on their orders, according to
Reuters reporting. In a joint
statement released after the meeting, the two countries said they
would deepen their cooperation on COVID-19 response.
They also said they would work together on immigration policies
"that recognize the dignity of migrants and the imperative of
orderly, safe, and regular migration."
Lopez Obrador is pushing for more U.S. work permits for Mexicans and
Central Americans, including professionals.
The two countries also said they would try to cooperate on efforts
to slow climate change and would restart high-level diplomatic talks
on trade and labor rights.
(Reporting by Dave Graham, Steve Holland and Alexandra Alper;
Additional reporting by Nandita Bose and David Alire Garcia; Writing
by Andy Sullivan; Editing by Giles Elgood, Aurora Ellis and Jonathan
Oatis)
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