(Adds Michel comment on UK reaction)
By John Chalmers and Kate Abnett
BRUSSELS, March 9 (Reuters) - European Council President
Charles Michel on Tuesday rejected charges of "vaccine
nationalism" levelled against the EU, saying that while Britain
and the United States have outright bans on exports of COVID-19
shots, the EU had not stopped exporting.
The EU has found itself under fire at home for a vaccine
roll-out much slower than those of former member Britain or the
United States, and abroad for so far doing less than China,
Russia or India to supply vaccines to poor countries.
Last week it annoyed vaccine buyers abroad by endorsing an
Italian decision to halt a shipment to Australia.
Britain had a quick retort for the comments by Michel, who
represents the 27 European Union member states, saying it has
not blocked the export of a single COVID-19 vaccine.
"Any references to a UK export ban or any restrictions on
vaccines are completely false," a UK government spokesman said.
Britain's foreign minister Dominic Raab has written to
Michel to "set the record straight" and a representative of the
EU's delegation to the UK has been summoned to a meeting at the
Foreign Office, officials confirmed.
"Glad if the UK reaction leads to more transparency &
increased exports, to EU and third countries," Michel said in a
tweet on Tuesday evening.
The dispute arose after Michel published a lengthy statement
on Tuesday afternoon defending the bloc's strategy. He said that
without Europe, it would not have been possible to develop and
produce several vaccines in less than a year, and EU solidarity
had ensured that poorer countries of the bloc received their
first doses.
He took aim at the "highly publicised" supply of vaccines by
China and Russia to other countries.
"We should not let ourselves be misled by China and Russia,
both regimes with less desirable values than ours, as they
organise highly limited but widely publicised operations to
supply vaccines to others." Michel also noted that China and
Russia had both vaccinated fewer people at home than the EU.
"Europe will not use vaccines for propaganda purposes. We
promote our values," he said.
Michel also defended a system to control the export of doses
produced in EU countries, invoked by Italy last week to block a
shipment of AstraZeneca shots to Australia.
"Our objective: to prevent companies from which we have
ordered and pre-financed doses from exporting them to other
advanced countries when they have not delivered to us what was
promised," Michel said. "The EU has never stopped exporting."
He said the EU would become the world's leading vaccine
producer in the coming months and was the best equipped to adapt
vaccine output quickly to virus mutations.
Tensions have increased between London and Brussels
following the completion of Britain's exit from the EU at the
end of 2020.
Relations strained by years of bruising talks over Brexit
took a turn for the worse in January when the EU briefly
threatened to use emergency measures to stop coronavirus
vaccines going from the bloc into Northern Ireland, a
British-ruled province bordering EU member state Ireland.
(Additional reporting by Kate Abnett in Brussels, Elizabeth
Piper and Costas Pitas in London; Editing by Mark Heinrich,
Sonya Hepinstall and Dan Grebler)