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WHO expects COVID pandemic to end in early 2022"Report" studio AIC Analytics Art Business Cultural policy Diaspora Domestic policy Ecology Education and science Energy European Games Exhibitions Finance Football Foreign policy Health ICT Incident Individual sports Industry Infrastructure Interesting Karabakh Literature Media Military Milli Majlis Multimedia Nagorno-Karabakh conflict Other countries Region Religion Show business Social security Team sports Tourism World Cup 2022
Egils Levits: ‘Relations between Latvia and Azerbaijan have developed very successfully’"Report" studio AIC Analytics Art Business Cultural policy Diaspora Domestic policy Ecology Education and science Energy European Games Exhibitions Finance Football Foreign policy Health ICT Incident Individual sports Industry Infrastructure Interesting Karabakh Literature Media Military Milli Majlis Multimedia Nagorno-Karabakh conflict Other countries Region Religion Show business Social security Team sports Tourism World Cup 2022
European automakers massively withdraw small cars from production"Report" studio AIC Analytics Art Business Cultural policy Diaspora Domestic policy Ecology Education and science Energy European Games Exhibitions Finance Football Foreign policy Health ICT Incident Individual sports Industry Infrastructure Interesting Karabakh Literature Media Military Milli Majlis Multimedia Nagorno-Karabakh conflict Other countries Region Religion Show business Social security Team sports Tourism World Cup 2022
Latvian President visits Alley of Martyrs"Report" studio AIC Analytics Art Business Cultural policy Diaspora Domestic policy Ecology Education and science Energy European Games Exhibitions Finance Football Foreign policy Health ICT Incident Individual sports Industry Infrastructure Interesting Karabakh Literature Media Military Milli Majlis Multimedia Nagorno-Karabakh conflict Other countries Region Religion Show business Social security Team sports Tourism World Cup 2022
Latvian President pays respect to National Leader Heydar AliyevThe world will cope with the COVID pandemic in early 2022, but this doesn’t mean that the infection will disappear, the World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Director for Europe Hans Kluge said in an interview with Die Welt newspaper, Report informs, referring to TASS.
"I think 2021 will be another year of COVID-19," he said. "But now we can better predict and manage events. In 2020, there was only uncertainty in both healthcare and politics. A year later, we know much more, we have the tools, the diagnostic programs, the vaccine."
The WHO spokesman urged to be patient on the issue of vaccination.
"In the beginning, demand always exceeds supply. You cannot vaccinate the inhabitants of the entire planet at once," Kluge noted, adding that it is apparently inevitable that citizens in Europe will have vaccination passports in the summer, although this is not a WHO recommendation.
"We don’t know how long immunity lasts after vaccination," he argued. "Plus, a vaccination passport exacerbates inequality."
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