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Over 35,000 non-Maltese people vaccinated in Malta

Over 35,000 non-Maltese people vaccinated in Malta
May 26 2021 Share

Deputy Prime Minister and Health Minister Chris Fearne confirmed on Tuesday that over 35000 non-Maltese people have received their jab in Malta and contributed to Malta’s successful rollout and herd immunity achievement. The statistic was revealed whilst responding to parliamentary questions posed by PN MP Ivan Bartolo.

Fearne revealed the exact total as being 35,627 non-Maltese people having received at least their first dose so far. Non-Maltese people are eligible to receive their jab only if they hold a residence permit or are in the process of acquiring one. 42% of the entire population is fully vaccinated so far as the rollout continues.

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Photo Source: RF Studio, Chris Fearne FB

7 COVID-19 cases registered with 6 recoveries

7 COVID-19 cases registered with 6 recoveries
May 26 2021 Share

Malta has registered 7 new cases of COVID-19 in the past 24 hours from 2,080 swab tests, while 6 patients have recovered. 1 death was registered in the past 24 hours. This information was announced by the official Facebook page of Malta’s Ministry for Health.

As of Wednesday 26th May 2021, 490,524 vaccine doses were administered of which 310,403 were 1st doses. 189,055 people are currently fully vaccinated.

To date, Malta has registered 30,516 COVID-19 cases in total, of which: 30,028 have recovered, 419 died and 69 are still active.

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Photo Source: Charmaine Gauci FB

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European leaders impressed by Malta being first EU country to reach herd immunity

European leaders impressed by Malta being first EU country to reach herd immunity
May 26 2021 Share

Malta is the first EU country to have reached herd immunity after 70% of its population has received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. EU leaders allegedly affirmed being impressed by the country’s feat as revealed by Prime Minister Robert Abela in comments to TVM. In the mean time, the EU has enough vaccines to vaccinate its own 70% of the population by the end of July.

The variants could pose a potential threat to this target as member states are boosting their programs to try and mitigate the chances of the variant resulting in case spikes. The EU is also working to give no less than 100 million free vaccines to less developed countries to completely control the spread of the pandemic.

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Photo Source: Robert Abela FB

Neil Agius attempting to swim from Tunisia to Sicily for environmental awareness

Neil Agius attempting to swim from Tunisia to Sicily for environmental awareness
May 26 2021 Share

Former Olympian and environmental activist Neil Agius will be attempting an intense swimming feat by swimming from Tunisia to Sicily. This is a challenge no one has ever beat in recorded history, but Agius is set to attempt the crossing sometime between June 26 and July 7 given optimal weather conditions. He will be training by swimming around Gozo three times on three consecutive days. This new venture will see him crossing continents for a campaign ‘Wave of Change’ which aims to raise environmental awareness.

Agius told Times of Malta that ‘it should take around 50 hours of non-stop swimming’ and that he chose the route because it has never been done before. Agius is determined to break another record, following his 2020 swim from Sicily to Malta in 28 hours. In December he also crossed the freezing waters between Gozo and Malta in just two hours, and back in 2018, he swam 70km around Malta in 22 hours.