News / Local
Russia rubbishes UK vaccine theft claims
13 Oct 2021 at 06:09hrs | Views
Claims in the British press that Russian spies stole the blueprint for the British-made Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine are unfounded, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said.
An October 10 article in The Sun newspaper, a popular daily tabloid, recently alleged that Russian spies "stole" the formula of the vaccine, developed by UK-Swedish company AstraZeneca, to create Russia's Sputnik V jab.
The paper cited anonymous security sources in its brief story.
Speaking at a news conference in the Kazakh capital Nur-Sultan yesterday, Lavrov said, "As for our British and other Western partners, I don't think someone will take these unfounded statements seriously.
"There have already been many baseless accusations," he said.
While there have been reports of rare side-effects with AstraZeneca's shots, with a tiny minority of people experiencing blood-clotting after receiving the jab, "no such cases have occurred with Sputnik V", Lavrov said, according to Russia's TASS news agency.
"I think that everyone who is interested will draw conclusions for themselves."
The row comes as the United Kingdom and Russia are at opposite ends of their vaccination campaigns.
About 85 percent of people over 12 have had a first dose of a Covid-19 vaccine in the UK, while almost 80 percent have had both jabs.
But while Russia was fast to develop and launch its Sputnik vaccine when the pandemic struck last year, take-up has been slow, with many citing distrust of the authorities and fear of new medical products.
Russian
MOSCOW. – Claims in the British press that Russian spies stole the blueprint for the British-made Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine are unfounded, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said.
An October 10 article in The Sun newspaper, a popular daily tabloid, recently alleged that Russian spies "stole" the formula of the vaccine, developed by UK-Swedish company AstraZeneca, to create Russia's Sputnik V jab.
The paper cited anonymous security sources in its brief story.
Speaking at a news conference in the Kazakh capital Nur-Sultan yesterday, Lavrov said, "As for our British and other Western partners, I don't think someone will take these unfounded statements seriously.
"There have already been many baseless accusations," he said.
While there have been reports of rare side-effects with AstraZeneca's shots, with a tiny minority of people experiencing blood-clotting after receiving the jab, "no such cases have occurred with Sputnik V", Lavrov said, according to Russia's TASS news agency.
"I think that everyone who is interested will draw conclusions for themselves."
The row comes as the United Kingdom and Russia are at opposite ends of their vaccination campaigns.
About 85 percent of people over 12 have had a first dose of a Covid-19 vaccine in the UK, while almost 80 percent have had both jabs.
But while Russia was fast to develop and launch its Sputnik vaccine when the pandemic struck last year, take-up has been slow, with many citing distrust of the authorities and fear of new medical products.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said yesterday Russia needed to speed up its vaccination campaign against Covid-19 as the country recorded 973 coronavirus-related deaths, its highest single-day toll since the start of the pandemic.
An October 10 article in The Sun newspaper, a popular daily tabloid, recently alleged that Russian spies "stole" the formula of the vaccine, developed by UK-Swedish company AstraZeneca, to create Russia's Sputnik V jab.
The paper cited anonymous security sources in its brief story.
Speaking at a news conference in the Kazakh capital Nur-Sultan yesterday, Lavrov said, "As for our British and other Western partners, I don't think someone will take these unfounded statements seriously.
"There have already been many baseless accusations," he said.
While there have been reports of rare side-effects with AstraZeneca's shots, with a tiny minority of people experiencing blood-clotting after receiving the jab, "no such cases have occurred with Sputnik V", Lavrov said, according to Russia's TASS news agency.
"I think that everyone who is interested will draw conclusions for themselves."
The row comes as the United Kingdom and Russia are at opposite ends of their vaccination campaigns.
About 85 percent of people over 12 have had a first dose of a Covid-19 vaccine in the UK, while almost 80 percent have had both jabs.
But while Russia was fast to develop and launch its Sputnik vaccine when the pandemic struck last year, take-up has been slow, with many citing distrust of the authorities and fear of new medical products.
Russian
MOSCOW. – Claims in the British press that Russian spies stole the blueprint for the British-made Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine are unfounded, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said.
An October 10 article in The Sun newspaper, a popular daily tabloid, recently alleged that Russian spies "stole" the formula of the vaccine, developed by UK-Swedish company AstraZeneca, to create Russia's Sputnik V jab.
The paper cited anonymous security sources in its brief story.
Speaking at a news conference in the Kazakh capital Nur-Sultan yesterday, Lavrov said, "As for our British and other Western partners, I don't think someone will take these unfounded statements seriously.
"There have already been many baseless accusations," he said.
While there have been reports of rare side-effects with AstraZeneca's shots, with a tiny minority of people experiencing blood-clotting after receiving the jab, "no such cases have occurred with Sputnik V", Lavrov said, according to Russia's TASS news agency.
"I think that everyone who is interested will draw conclusions for themselves."
The row comes as the United Kingdom and Russia are at opposite ends of their vaccination campaigns.
About 85 percent of people over 12 have had a first dose of a Covid-19 vaccine in the UK, while almost 80 percent have had both jabs.
But while Russia was fast to develop and launch its Sputnik vaccine when the pandemic struck last year, take-up has been slow, with many citing distrust of the authorities and fear of new medical products.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said yesterday Russia needed to speed up its vaccination campaign against Covid-19 as the country recorded 973 coronavirus-related deaths, its highest single-day toll since the start of the pandemic.
Source - Al Jazeera