Awkward conversation: Erdogan and Putin explained who had stronger immunity



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“The immunity is very weak”, was the reaction of the Turkish president when Putin mentioned the amount of antibodies he had (about 15 or 16).

The Russian president told a colleague about an outbreak of disease in his administration in early September, which forced him to isolate himself and return to telecommuting.

“Here are my antibodies, even more than a thousand,” boasted the Turkish president.

Putin explained the difference in a different calculation methodology. “The experts explained to me that immunity is good. I spent the whole day with an infected person and did not get sick. If you are considering a booster, I suggest Sputnik V, Putin said, touting a vaccine that he himself has vaccinated this year.

“I chose BioNTech for that,” replied RT Erdogan, referring to the Pfizer / BioNTech vaccine. Turkey allowed the population to be vaccinated with the Sputnik V vaccine in April, but the vaccine was rarely used because Russia did not deliver enough for the second dose, the country’s health minister, Fahrettin Koca, complained in August.

“Well then next time,” Putin was somewhat disappointed. RT Erdogan didn’t answer anything, he just laughed.

Recipes Tayyipas Erdogan

Recipes Tayyipas Erdogan

Then, while escorting Turkish President Putin, he shook hands with him.

Earlier this month, the 68-year-old Kremlin host had to isolate himself for two weeks after dozens of people in his immediate surroundings fell ill with COVID-19.

Russia recorded a record 857 deaths from COVID-19 for the second day in a row on Wednesday.

According to the latest increase in casualties, the total number of deaths in the country has risen to 206,388, the highest in Europe.

Russian authorities are accused of trying to hide the true scale of the outbreak.

Several Russian vaccines, including Sputnik, have been available for many months, but doctors are struggling to persuade people who are skeptical about vaccination.

By Wednesday, just under 30 percent. Russians have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19, according to the Gogov website, which collects data from the regions.



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