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Lithuanian Prime Minister Ingrida Simonyte said the Russian coronavirus vaccine is a hybrid weapon of Russian President Vladimir Putin. In response, the Russian Foreign Ministry was asked if there is mass vaccination in Lithuania.
Russia’s Foreign Ministry reacted to a February 6 statement by Lithuanian Prime Minister Ingrida Szimonyte, who called Russia’s Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine a hybrid weapon by Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Response of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs published on Twitter from the embassy in Lithuania.
“Despite the wave of misinformation and similar biased statements at all stages of the creation and initiation of vaccine use, the internationally recognized Sputnik V indicators speak for themselves. The main thing is that vaccination massive is already underway in Russia. And in Lithuania? “- reads the tweet.
Despite the wave of misinformation and similar biased statements at all stages of vaccine creation and use, the indicators #SputnikV internationally recognized speak for themselves.
The main thing is that mass vaccination is already underway in Russia.
And in Lithuania? pic.twitter.com/rzPjt97iAz– RusEmb_LT (@RusEmb_LT) February 7, 2021
The first Russian vaccine against Sputnik V coronavirus was registered in August 2020. Putin claimed that it is effective, forms a stable immune system, and has passed all tests.
At the same time, the vaccine was criticized in the scientific community, since it was registered before the third phase of clinical trials. In Russia, they claimed to be 95 percent effective. Rthe poison of Russian scientists noted that the accelerated approach to the registration of vaccines contradicts scientific and ethical standards for drug development… Vaccinated Russians have complained of various side effects: fever, loss of smell, high blood pressure.
The Sputnik V vaccine is not approved in the European Union. In Russia, there is a mass vaccination with a national drug, it has also been transferred to various countries.
As of February 7, almost 106 million cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in the world, more than 2.3 million infected people died. This is evidenced by data from the US Johns Hopkins University, which tracks the spread of the disease.
More than 124 million people in the world have been vaccinated with various drugs against the coronavirus.
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