Macron,
Merkel discussed potential Sputnik V vaccine cooperation with Putin
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[March 31, 2021]
PARIS/MOSCOW (Reuters) - French President
Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel discussed possible
cooperation on vaccines with Russian President Vladimir Putin in a joint
video conference on Tuesday, Macron's office and the Kremlin said.
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The Kremlin said in a statement that the trio had discussed the
outlook for Russia's flagship Sputnik V vaccine being registered
across the EU as well as potential deliveries and joint production
of the vaccine inside the EU.
The European Union's regulator -- the European Medicines Agency --
has yet to grant its approval to Sputnik V, but is reviewing it, and
some individual EU member states have either approved it or are
assessing it for approval at a national level.
Use of the Russian vaccine has divided the 27-nation bloc with some
such as Thierry Breton, the EU's internal market commissioner,
saying it has no need for Sputnik V and others, such as Charles
Michel, who chairs EU summits, accusing Moscow of using vaccines for
propaganda, something it rejects.
Behind the scenes, the bloc is showing increased interest in the
Sputnik V shot, EU diplomatic and official sources have told
Reuters.
Macron and Merkel had also told Putin to respect jailed political
opponent Alexei Navalny's rights and to preserve his health, the
French presidency said in its statement.
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The Kremlin said Putin had
explained what it called the "objective
circumstances" of Navalny's case, which saw him
jailed last month for two and a half years on
charges he called politically motivated. He has
since alleged he is not getting proper medical
treatment.
The three leaders also discussed the situation
in Ukraine, Belarus, Libya, Syria and agreed to
coordinate efforts so that Iran returned to full
compliance with its international obligations,
the French statement said.
Putin used the call to accuse Ukraine of
provoking armed confrontation with pro-Russian
separatists and of failing to honour earlier
agreements over its war-torn east, the Kremlin
said.
(Reporting by Michel Rose in Paris and Andrew
Osborn in Moscow; Editing by Tom Balmforth)
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