Covid-19: Argentina health minister resign over vaccine line-jumping

Covid-19: Argentina health minister resign over vaccine line-jumping

BUENOS AIRES, Feb 20 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Argentina’s health minister
resigned late Friday after it emerged that friends of his had been able to
skip the line for a Covid-19 vaccination.

Health Minister Gines Gonzalez Garci stepped down after President Alberto
Fernandez called on him to quit in the wake of the scandal.

“Responding to your express request, I present my resignation from the
position of minister of health,” Gonzalez Garcia, a 75-year-old doctor, wrote
in a letter addressed to the president.

He will be replaced by one of his deputy ministers, 48-year-old Carla
Vizzotti, who was responsible for securing the Russian Sputnik V vaccine for Argentina, the first country in America to approve and use it.

The scandal broke after a 71-year-old journalist, Horacio Verbitsky,
announced on the radio that, owing to his longstanding friendship with the
minister, he had been able to get vaccinated in his office ahead of the
general population.

So far only health workers have been vaccinated in Argentina and
vaccinations for people aged over 70 only began on Wednesday in the province of Buenos Aires.

Local media reported that other people close to the government were also
vaccinated at the health ministry.

Fernandez, who is in his 60s and was vaccinated in front of cameras to
encourage Argentinians to sign up, ordered his chief of staff to ask for the
minister’s resignation, officials said.

Argentina, with 44 million inhabitants, has recorded some two million
Covid-19 cases and suffered more than 50,000 deaths.

Its officials are not the only ones in South America to face such
accusations.

In Peru, the government has been rocked by charges against some 500
government officials — including former president Martin Vizcarra and top
ministers — accused of getting vaccinated ahead of their turn.

Police raided the health ministry and two university clinics on Friday as
part of the investigation into what has been termed “Vacunagate.”

The group allegedly received some of the 3,200 extra doses provided for the
staff in charge of trials of the Chinese Sinopharm vaccine, which included
12,000 Peruvian volunteers. — NNN-AGENCIES

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