Foreign minister in talks on Russia-Hungary cooperation in vaccine production
Hungary and Russia have started talks on strategic cooperation on vaccine production, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said after talks with Denis Manturov, the Russian minister for industry and trade, on the sidelines of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum in Russia on Thursday.
Szijjártó said the talks between the Hungarian national vaccine centre and the Russian Direct Investment Fund has resulted in a preliminary agreement whereby Russia allows production in Hungary of its Sputnik V vaccine pending the signing of a strategic cooperation agreement. Technical issues are yet to be discussed, he added.
“The point is that Hungary and Russia are both open to Hungary manufacturing vaccines under a Russian licence,” Szijjártó said.
He noted Hungary will begin operating its own vaccine plant in late 2022, adding that Thursday’s deal was preliminary. The Russian jab is especially popular in the East, the minister said, adding that new production capacities would be needed to meet growing demand.
“If Hungary can profit from this, then I think it’s worth having a go at it,” Szijjártó said.
He said the planned cooperation in vaccine production would be a continuation of the recent partnership between Hungary and Russia. Szijjártó praised Manturov for his role in allowing Hungary to be the first European country to purchase Russia’s coronavirus vaccine, noting that all of the doses had been delivered on time.
He said the partnership had enabled one million Hungarians who received Sputnik jabs to develop immunity to the virus and Hungary to be the first European country to reopen its economy.
As regards Russia’s announcement that it will resume regular flights to Hungary from July 10, Szijjáró said that for the time being entry to Russia was restricted to business travelers and those visiting relatives.
He expressed hope that Russia and Hungary could soon lift entry restrictions for each other’s citizens and recognise each other’s immunity certificates, talks on which are ongoing.
Read alsoSlovakia to use the Russian vaccine but the health minister does not recommend it
Source: MTI
please make a donation here
Hot news
Hungarian forint hits new 2-year low against the euro, attempts to recover
BREAKING! Travel chaos as trains come to a standstill at major Budapest railway station
Historic moment: permanent Puskás Museum opens its doors in Budapest – PHOTOS
Council approves 2025 EU budget
Survey: Fidesz retains lead in polls
VIDEO: ‘Now You See Me 3’ cast and crew say goodbye to Budapest
1 Comment
They need to get the Sputnik vaccine certified for travel throughout all of Europe. The Sputnik vaccine is clearly safer and the best choice for most people whom are not against a vaccine because it came from Russsia.