BERLIN/BRUSSELS, Feb 25 (Reuters) - Fraudsters have offered
400 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines worth some 3 billion
euros to European Union countries, two officials, showing how
criminals seek to capitalise on a botched inoculation campaign
weighing on the bloc's economic recovery.
EU leaders will discuss by videoconference on Thursday how
to protect their 450 million citizens from new, more contagious
variants of the coronavirus, ensure stable vaccine deliveries,
ramp up production and update jabs to counter new strains.
Two officials with the bloc's executive European Commission
estimated that around 400 million doses of "ghost" vaccine had
been offered by fraudsters at a price of up to 3 billion euros
($3.67 billion).
"There is a really large quantity," one said. "Nobody has
any idea what is actually in these vials...The best case is it's
just not working, in the worst case it's a very serious issue."
The official, who noted that most of the shots offered to EU
governments by traders were purportedly the AstraZeneca
vaccine, compared the situation to the start of the coronavirus
pandemic in early 2020 when criminal exploited a shortage of
masks and other protective equipment.
A second official, who also spoke on condition of anonymity,
said the Commission was worried about "ghost" vaccines.
"It is unclear whether these are genuine vaccine doses or if
we are just talking about salt water in small vials," the
official told Reuters.
The EU had warned already that vaccine fraud was on the
rise, with fake doses circulating on the market, but the extent
of the problem has been unclear until now.
($1 = 0.8179 euros)
(Reporting by Sabine Siebold, John Chalmers, Writing by
Gabriela Baczynska
Editing by Mark Heinrich)