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“Gines was a great minister, but what he did was unforgivable”, Argentine president

Monday, February 22nd 2021 - 08:55 UTC
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Fernandez on Friday asked 75-year-old doctor Gonzalez to resign and a day later replaced him with Carla Vizzotti, 48, a former deputy minister Fernandez on Friday asked 75-year-old doctor Gonzalez to resign and a day later replaced him with Carla Vizzotti, 48, a former deputy minister

Argentine president Alberto Fernandez blasted his former health minister, and close friend, Gines Gonzalez García over an “unforgivable” coronavirus vaccine scandal, in quotes published on Sunday.

Gonzalez Garcia resigned late on Friday after it emerged he had helped acquaintances cut in line to receive a Covid-19 vaccine. “Gines was a great minister, and on top of that I like him, he's my close friend. But what he did was unforgivable,” Fernandez told the Pagina 12, which said it had spoken to him on Saturday.

”Politics is ethical, we have to end these types of practices, with the Argentine culture of liveliness, craftiness (and) the management of influences.“

Fernandez on Friday asked 75-year-old doctor Gonzalez to resign and a day later replaced him with Carla Vizzotti, 48, a former deputy minister responsible for securing the Russian Sputnik V vaccine for Argentina.

The scandal broke after a 79-year-old journalist, Horacio Verbitsky, announced on the radio that, owing to his longstanding friendship with Gonzalez Garcia, he had been able to get vaccinated in his office ahead of the general population.

Verbitsky, a close associate of the current Argentine administration, later apologized for having asked to skip the queue. He was fired from the radio station where he had a morning program. At first he argued that although skeptical about vaccines, after several members of his family tested positive to Covid 19, and one died, he changed of opinion.

Since Argentina began vaccinating its people, only healthcare workers had received the jab until Wednesday, when over-70s in Buenos Aires province were also invited to be immunized.

”I don't tolerate things like this, nor do I do things like this. I drive my own car; when I wasn't a government official and I was invited to skip the queue via the VIP lounge, I refused it. As president I cannot allow these privileges to be granted,“ said Fernandez.

Local media say the public prosecutor's office has opened an investigation into the vaccines scandal.

Vizzotti insisted on Sunday that ”in no way was there a VIP immunization“ program. She told Radio 10 that it involved ”a small number of people“ and that there was no policy of ”reserving vaccines for a privileged situation.“

Vizzotti said that from now on there would be ”a plan to monitor the administration of vaccines.”

Argentina, a country of 44 million, has received 1.2 million Sputnik V vaccine doses so far along with 580,000 doses of Covishield from the Serum Institute of India. It has recorded more than two million coronavirus cases and over 51,000 deaths.

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