Russian vaccine: can vaccination be started without an EU permit?

Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó on Friday met Mikhail Murashko, the Russian health minister, and said Russia has offered to invite Hungarian experts at its vaccine manufacturing plant to study the production of the Sputnik coronavirus vaccine.
Szijjártó told a joint press conference after the talks that the Hungarian government was working to give Hungarians access to a vaccine as soon as possible.
He thanked Murashko for choosing Hungary as the first country to send samples to, adding that Hungarian experts may travel to Russia as soon as next week.
Szijjártó said that vaccines were being developed “both in the East and in the West” and it was yet to be seen which one would be available in sufficient quantities. He added that “it would be irresponsible to give up any of those possibilities”.
He also added that the government would not “give in to any business lobby even if they hire politicians in Hungary, in Brussels, or elsewhere.”
