(Adds quote from WHO Europe vaccination expert)
* WHO urges solidarity amid vaccine rollout 'teething
problems'
* EU, Britain clash over delays in promised vaccine supply
* WHO's Kluge hopes 'extra future production' eases delays
* Russian vaccine data bound for Geneva -WHO Europe boss
By Stephanie Nebehay and John Miller
GENEVA, Jan 28 (Reuters) - The World Health Organization's
Europe director Hans Kluge said on Thursday vaccine
manufacturers were working non-stop to plug shortfalls in
supplies to countries struggling to contain the COVID-19
pandemic and urged them not to jostle for deliveries.
"Solidarity does not necessarily mean that each country in
the world starts (vaccinating) at exactly the same moment ...
The good understanding is that no one is safe before everyone is
safe," Kluge told an online news briefing.
Asked about delays in expediting Pfizer and
AstraZeneca vaccines to patients across the 27-nation
European Union, Kluge and a WHO-Europe vaccination expert,
Siddhartha Datta, appealed to governments and manufacturers to
cooperate in addressing "teething problems" in the rollout.
"The reality is there is a shortage of vaccines...(But) we
don't doubt that manufacturers and producers are working 24-7 to
bridge the gaps and we're confident the delays we are seeing now
are going to be made up by extra production in the future,"
Kluge said.
The WHO reiterated that vaccines should be shared equitably,
between poor and rich nations, to help end the pandemic with
Datta stressing COVID-19 vaccines were "a global public good".
As Kluge and Datta spoke, Europe's fight to secure COVID-19
vaccine supplies escalated as Britain demanded that it receive
all the shots it paid for after the EU asked AstraZeneca to
divert supplies from the UK.
The EU, whose members are far behind Israel, the United
Kingdom and the United States in dispensing vaccines, is
scrambling to obtain shots just as the West's biggest drugmakers
slow deliveries to the bloc due to production problems.
"We need to be patient, it will take time to vaccinate,"
Kluge said, adding that a total of 35 countries in Europe had
launched vaccinations with 25 million does administered so far.
PANDEMIC PARADOX
"This paradox, where communities sense an end is in sight
with the vaccine but, at the same time, are called to adhere to
restrictive measures in the face of a new threat, is causing
tension, angst, fatigue, and confusion. This is completely
understandable in these circumstances."
Kluge said continued high rates of transmission and emerging
variants of the virus made it urgent to vaccinate priority
groups, but acknowledged the rate of vaccine production and
distribution was not yet up to expectations.
He reiterated the WHO's stance that "vaccination passports"
- proof that somebody has been inoculated - will be important to
monitor inoculation coverage and efficacy of shots, but should
not be used as a litmus test for allowing people to travel.
Asked about WHO's scrutiny of Russia's Sputnik V vaccine,
Kluge said he had spoken with Moscow's ambassador on Wednesday
and that he could confirm that data needed by WHO scientists to
review the shot was en route to Geneva where the WHO is based.
The Russian vaccine is being distributed in Europe including
EU member state Hungary as well as elsewhere in the world, even
though the European Medicines Agency is not currently reviewing
it for approval.
(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay and John Miller
Editing by Mark Heinrich)